September 2022 TV’sflagshipsfantasy
THE FIGHT FOR ATTENTION RTS LONDON CONVENTION 2022 BOOK NOW: rts.org.uk KINGS PLACE, 90 YORK WAY, LONDON N1 9AG Priya Dogra Barbara Arvanitidis Senior Producer, CNN Tim Davie Director-General, BBC Nima Elbagir Chief International Investigative Correspondent, CNN Michael Grade Chair, Ofcom Maria Kyriacou President ViacomCBS Networks UK, Australia and Israel Alex Mahon CEO, Channel 4 Dame Carolyn McCall DBE CEO, ITV Ben McOwen Wilson Managing Director, Google Play, EMEA Gianluca Mezzofiore Investigative Producer, CNN Katie Polglase Investigative Producer, CNN Amol Rajan Journalist & Presenter Stephen van Rooyen EVP & CEO, UK & Europe, Sky Gerhard Zeiler President, International, Warner Bros. Discovery President & Managing Director, EMEA (ex. Poland), Warner Bros. Discovery CHAIRED SPEAKERS:BY: TUESDAY 27 SEPTEMBER
A real relationship drama
Working Lives: Script editor
Our Friend in Ireland
Don’t write off linear yet Barb’s improved audience measurement system shows the streamers are advancing with brilliant originals but still need the support of evergreens
The power of fantasy
Harry Bennett warms to a disarmingly odd couple who want to have a serious talk about the big mess we’re in
The RTS lifts the lid on Stefan Golaszewski’s Marriage, a moving portrait of a couple who tied the knot 27 years ago
Why do channels find it so hard to say goodbye to a series? Matthew Bell has a few ideas
Agnes Cogan identifies a possible future Oscar winner as the Irish screen sector adds new production capacity
When to pull the plug
News
A foreign correspondent’s role can resemble that of a faithless lover, warns Lindsey Hilsum Comfort Classic: Life on Mars Matthew Bell hums along to a gloriously funny retread of the bad attitudes and fashions of 1970s crime-fighting
Caitlin Danaher lauds the Lionesses’ success and assesses how television coverage of other women’s sports might benefit
From the
A very modern media mogul
The RTS hears why Peter Kosminsky’s cyber drama, The Undeclared War, is a warning to politicians to act before it’s too late 2022 Steve
Game changer for TV sport
Did he dunnit?
RTS London Convention Chair Priya Dogra’s track record in billion-dollar deals gives her a unique perspective on today’s media landscape, says Steve Clarke
3Television www.rts.org.uk September
Journal of The
Society September 2022 l Volume 59/8
Editor
Cover: House of the Dragon (Sky) Theresa Wise living. Thankfully, we had the Lion esses to take us out of ourselves and bring football home for the first time since 1966. Caitlin Danaher’s passion ate piece celebrating their success and what it might mean for TV coverage of other women’s sport will lift your spirits.Ican’t guarantee good weather for the RTS London Convention on 27 September, but I can promise a stellar line-up of industry leaders.
This summer is certain to be remembered for its heatwaves and mounting concern over the cost of
Lindsey Hilsum’s TV Diary
It’s different strokes for different folks when it comes to how script editors work with their writers, Fiona McAllister tells Matthew Bell
Tara Conlan explains why two of TV’s biggest shows of the year provide more than mere escapism
smclarke_333@hotmail.comClarke
RTS, 3 Dorset Rise London EC4Y 8EN T: 020 7822 2810 W: www.rts.org.uk Royal Television
Our cover story is devoted to one of television’s hottest genres – fantasy, for decades a stalwart of popular and literary culture. As Tara Conlan reports, no effort has been spared to ensure that HBO’s prequel to Game of Thrones, House of the Dragon, and Ama zon’s The Lord of the Rings: The Rings of Power made it to the screen in style. These uber-expensive, epic shows, with their star casts and use of British craft skills promise a visual feast for their millions of fans. At the other end of the TV drama landscape is the naturalism of Stefan Golaszewski’s new show, Marriage. It
Don’t miss Steve Clarke’s interview with conference Chair Priya Dogra. was the subject of an RTS event fea turing its stars, Sean Bean and Nicola Walker, in which Golaszewski dis cussed his search for authenticity. Another of our August events was devoted to the brilliant Peter Kosmin sky’s The Undeclared War, a warning about the perils of cyberwarfare set in the very near future.
Ear Candy: The Rest is Politics
Natural history’s green challenge
Steve Clarke investigates how wildlife programmemakers are working to cut their carbon footprint
A catastrophe waiting to happen
© Royal Television Society 2022 The views expressed in Television are not necessarily those of the RTS. Registered Charity 313 728
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An RTS London event looked at how Barb is evolving so that it can now measure audiences for streaming services. Matthew Bell’s report con tains some surprising findings. Also, don’t miss his analysis of why TV series are cancelled.
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Sub-editor Sarah smbancroft@me.comBancroft editor writer Matthew bell127@btinternet.comBell
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ITV’s new thriller The Suspect, starring Aidan Turner, twists some of the genre’s conventions. Shilpa Ganatra discovers how it was done
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Lindsey Hilsum explains why a correspondent’sforeignrolecanresemblethatofafaithlesslover I
5Television www.rts.org.uk September 2022 4Channel
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Over the weekend, we contact humanitarian agencies and Greek government departments to ask for comment, hoping they will do something. Where is the line between being a journalist and a humanitarian?Afternearly40 years as a foreign correspondent, I still struggle with that question. The public service remit we have at Channel 4 News means that my job is simply to tell the story – it’s up to others to act on it. But a little girl is dying – surely, we can do more?
t’s a burning hot Friday in August, and on a small islet in the Evros river that divides Greece from Turkey, a nine-year-old girl called Aya is dying of a scorpion sting. Her five-year-old sister, Maria, has already died. Why is no doctor treating them? Because they are Syrian refugees, kicked like a football back and forth between the two countries. “No one hears us. No one wants us,” weeps 27-year-old Baida al Saleh, in a Whats App voice message she sends to Channel 4 News Her mobile battery is failing but she manages to send us video of the refu gees, and we broadcast a story. The Greek government responds by denying that the 39 people are on Greek territory, even though the European Court of Human Rights has ordered it to mount a rescue. We start to be trolled on Twitter by people saying we made up the story and it’s fake news.
This time last year, as the Taliban swept into Kabul, I felt the dilemma more acutely than ever. Women I had filmed on previous reporting trips were sending messages begging me to help them leave the country. Mostly, I could do nothing, but I did help some human rights workers get asylum for a former policewoman, whose story of terrible abuse I had told on Channel 4 News. She and her two little boys are safely in Canada now.
■ Sometimes, I feel that being a journalist is like being a faithless lover. All the time I was in Ukraine this year I felt guilty about not being in Afghanistan. Now I feel bad about not being in Ukraine, as I haven’t reported from there since May.
At Channel 4 News, we have fewer resources than other broadcasters, but international news has always been a priority and eye-witness reporting is the bedrock of our programme. Sometimes, viewers stop me in the street to say how much they appreci ate it.
Lindsey Hilsum is international editor of Channel 4 News
TV diary
■ Our story about the Syrian refugees became headline news in Greece, which put more pressure on its Gov ernment. That weekend, some Afghan refugees pushed a dinghy back to the islet, and the Syrians were able to reach mainland Greece, where they were rescued by the police. On the Monday, the Greek minister for migration visited the group. They were receiving food, water and med ical attention, he said, and Maria’s body would be brought to the main land for burial. It’s rare that a story has a direct impact. But, on this occasion, I think it did.
■ On the whole, we don’t get so involved. We also tell alternative sides of the story: in Afghanistan, in June, we filmed Dr Roshanak Wardak, a gynaecologist/obstetrician, who has been appointed by the Tali ban as head of mother/child health care in her province. She’s not exactly a Taliban sup porter, but she hated what she saw as US occupation, and believes that the end of the war is an opportunity. She speaks with derision of the women who have fled, believing that they, like her, should stay and help other Afghans. Personally. I don’t blame any Afghan woman who wants to leave, but I have to admire her determination and courage.
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The police creed, according to Hunt, reads: “Grab ’em by the balls and their hearts and minds will surely follow.”
G alloping inflation, strikes, oversized flares, platform boots, and suffocating heat. It’s almost as if we’re reliv ing the 1970s. And the perfect TV companion? Look no fur ther than the hugely enjoyable and critically adored sci-fi cop series Life on Mars Sam Tyler (John Simm), a bythe-book, impeccably liberal detective in noughties Manchester, is knocked unconscious by a speeding car while listening to David Bowie’s Life on Mars? and wakes up, dressed in big collar, Chelsea boots and leather jacket, in 1973. He’s still a cop, though a fish out of water in the unreconstructed police force of the 1970s. In shock, Tyler is told by young detective Chris Skelton (Marshall Lancaster) that “you’re as white as a ginger bird’s arse”. Immedi ately, the viewer knows where they are – The Sweeney with added irony. Skelton, though, is only the hors d’oeuvre for the show’s main course, Philip Glenister’s snarling DCI Gene Hunt, a man accurately described by Tyler as “an overweight, over-the-hill, nicotine-stained, borderline-alcoholic homophobe with a superiority complex and an unhealthy obsession with male bonding”. To which, Hunt’s rejoinder is: “You make that sound like a bad thing.”
The writers, principally Matthew Graham and Ashley Pharoah, who co-created Life on Mars with TV legend Tony Jordan, have a huge amount of fun with the dialogue. Here’s Hunt, oblivious to the coming of Margaret Thatcher, wading into politics: “There will never be a woman prime minister as long as I have a hole in my arse.” BBC Life on Mars Matthew Bell hums along to a gloriously funny reconstruction of the bad attitudes and fashions of crime-fighting1970s
John Simm (left) as Sam Tyler and Philip Glenister as Gene Hunt
COMFORT CLASSIC
A Labour poster plonked Tory leader David Cameron on the bonnet of a Quattro next to the slogan, “Don’t let him take Britain back to the 1980s”, an attempt to remind voters of a decade blighted by unemployment and social unrest. The Tories responded by adopting Hunt’s catchphrase: “Fire up the Quattro. It’s time for change.”
W ith a thechaptertheconleadershippartyTorytestjustlatestinUK’s seemingly endless political turmoil, Alastair Campbell and Rory Stewart’s podcast, The Rest is Politics, may help to see you through. Given their respective backgrounds – maverick political high-flyers, each with their own distinctive hinterlands – theirs is a penetrating gaze.
7Television www.rts.org.uk September 2022 Production designers Brian Sykes and Matt Gant lovingly recreated the 1970s and the soundtrack from the era is a treat. But Life on Mars is more than a period romp. Tyler’s existential crisis is both palpable and moving – is he alive or dead, dreaming or has he travelled back in time to the 1970s? And there’s a beautiful, slow-burn romance between Tyler and WPC Annie Cartwright, played by the wonderful Liz White. Simm decided to leave after two series and was given a superb finale by the writers. A year or two later, Sky One’s The 50 Greatest TV Endings, put it at number one. The BBC, however, wanted more and producer Kudos was happy to oblige. Unlike most TV spin-offs, Ashes to Ashes was almost as good as the original. The principal cops – minus Simm and White – returned, and were joined by Keeley Hawes as DI Alex Drake, a mod ern-day Met detective who is shot and wakes up in 1981. Hunt has swapped his Ford Cortina for an Audi Quattro, and London has replaced Manchester as the show’s setting. Otherwise, it’s steady as sheBygoes.now, the show had seeped into the nation’s consciousness. So much so that both Labour and the Conserva tives used it in their campaigns for the 2010 general election.
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Campbell, a prolific journalist and writer best known as Tony Blair’s acer bic spin doctor, knows No 10 from the inside. Stewart, Secretary of State for International Development in Theresa May’s Cabinet and an early public critic of Boris Johnson, is also a best-selling author, academic and royal tutor. Both are keen to expose the inner workings of the corridors of power – no matter how damning the anec dotes are for their former colleagues.
After three series and another clever ending, Ashes to Ashes brought down the curtain on time-travelling cops. Or did it? Intriguingly, both Simm and Glenister have recently hinted that the show could return, and Graham and Pharoah have even written a pilot epi sode for a third outing, the appropri ately titled Lazarus It’s hardly unknown for a TV show to be raised from the dead, is it? n Life on Mars and Ashes to Ashes are both on BBC iPlayer.
In their recent post-mortem on the BBC TV leadership debate, Stewart shared some of his treasure trove of Liz Truss stories. He recalled both the “rocket” he received for breaching her strict message discipline and how she once told him that foreign secretary was “the last job I would want”. First-hand accounts like these are the main draw of this podcast. But the duo’s analysis of the policy debates is rigorous, and the scope is impressively global. As well as Truss and Rishi Sunak’s con trasting approaches to the economy, the same episode covered Italian Prime Minister Mario Draghi’s resignation and the worsening famine in parts of Africa. They make an amusingly odd cou ple, as much for their temperaments as their politics: Stewart has an unwaver ing earnestness while Campbell is grumpier, and they both enjoy winding each other up over their differences. That the podcast is consistently topping the charts is a cause for opti mism: it indicates a growing appetite for healthier discussion of serious subjects. n Harry Bennett
LIVES
WORKING Doctor Who
Basically, the job is finding brilliant writers and working with them on their ideas; then, once we find the right broadcaster, working with the commis sioner and the writer to create the series.
Fiona McAllister works for Nicola Shindler’s new indie, Quay Street Productions, having learnt the ropes on the soaps Emmerdale and Coronation Street and then on Jodie Whittaker’s Doctor Who What does the job involve?
editorScript
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What is your role during the develop ment stage?
Development involves reading books and articles, keeping up with what’s on TV, reading a lot of scripts and meeting with writers to talk about their ideas and seeing if we would be a good fit. That relationship with the writer is crucial because talking about stories can be a bit exposing – honesty, trust and humour are important. As a script team, we’re pretty collaborative, so each project might get a couple of editors. And during production? By the time we reach prep, the scripts should be in pretty good shape. The director and producer may have edito rial notes to feed in at this point, and this is where we’re tweaking and amending the scripts to fit production specifics, such as locations, schedule and budget. This is also where we do a read-through, which usually involves a dialogue pass. As an exec, I’m currently working with a brilliant script editor who leads on the more time-consuming jobs (writing notes, issuing amends, proof ing drafts, etc) but I’m across all the story changes and script continuity. It’s a pretty sweet deal. How many rewrites does a script go through? That depends on the writer and the project. Some writers may not need that many drafts, or even that much input from a script editor, and in those cases my role might be more researchoriented – for example, if it’s based on a true story, I may have to find the real people involved and connect them with the writer. On other shows, the story emerges through the redrafting process, where writers want script editors to contrib ute editorially. How did you become a script editor? After studying English literature at Hull university, I got an entry-level job in ITV scheduling, then became the script assistant on Emmerdale. I was typing up amendments, checking continuity and writing up synopses. I’m very protective of soap, it’s incredibly hard work and it’s a steep learning curve – I worked with some fantastically talented people. I did BBC
All production companies work dif ferently and some have either develop ment or production script editors, but, at Quay Street, I work across both, so I get to stay with the writer from the very beginning of the idea all the way through production and post.
Script editing can be a great steppingstone to either writing or producing, but it can also be a job for life. I love it, but I’m hoping I could make the move into producing in the future.
What makes for a good script editor? If you don’t like reading, it’s not the job for you – it’s a sedentary job that involves a lot of reading and note writing. And you’ve got to love TV. It also requires hard work, attention to detail, enthusiasm and good organisation (or a heavy reliance on calendar apps). Can it be tricky working with writers?
What type of TV series would you love to work on? At Quay Street, I get to work across many different types of programmes – as a script editor, it helps to have a broad taste in TV. But I was a bit obsessed with the Second World War drama Band of Brothers – it’s a perfect TV show. If I had a time machine, I’d go back and work on that. n
9Television www.rts.org.uk September 2022 quality of the work; it might not be the right time now, but it could happen in the future. Sometimes a project takes years for the stars to align and the right commissioner to get on board. What do you bring to work with you? When I started everything was on paper, so I had a massive bag filled with scripts, notebooks and pens; now I carry an iPad, which is much better for the trees and my back. When a show is being filmed, though, I still have physi cal scripts with the annotations and amends handwritten in; it’s probably more superstition than practicality. What does a typical working day look like for you? Every day is different; there’s always a pile of scripts screaming to be read, but I could be in a writers room, working on script notes or story documents – there’s a lot of note writing – talking to a writer or in a development meet ing. When you’re in production, it gets more varied. What are the best and worst parts of the job? They are two sides of the same coin – when something you’ve worked on goes out on TV it is simultaneously the research for a few years, then assistant script editing, script editing and senior script editing. I moved on to Coronation Street and Doctor Who for Jodie Whittak er’s first two series, before going to Kudos to work in development and then to Quay Street. What are you working on at the moment? I’m working across a pretty cool slate of shows, but I’m chuffed that Significant Other has been announced – it’s a unique, weird comedic drama that we’ve been working on for a while with brilliant writers Dana Fainaru and Hamish Wright. Plus, it’s got a dream cast, direc tor and producer. It’s properly exciting. And we’ve just wrapped on Russell T Davies’s Nolly, starring Helena Bonham Carter. My colleague Charlie worked on Nolly but I read the scripts and peeked at the rushes and they are stunning. Both will be coming to ITV next year.
Writers usually want the input of a script editor. At Quay Street we’re led by the writer’s ideas. You have to ask questions and sometimes challenge them, sometimes contribute with ideas and editorial suggestions, but not tell them what to do. My job is not to be prescriptive and force a writer down a certain path; I’m not the writer. It’s my job to help them achieve their vision, and get them green lit. And, sometimes, offer emotional support. It’s more of a friendship, I think. What are the biggest challenges?
Picking yourself up when a script is rejected. When you’re working with a writer on a project you really believe in, not getting it commissioned can be devastating. You work closely with a writer and form a bond with them – you really want them to succeed. It isn’t necessarily a reflection on the best and worst feeling. It’s the best because it’s been such a long process and you’re super proud of it, but I’m also a masochist, so I’m on Twitter reading what people are saying about it.
Working on a TV institution such as Doctor Who must be terrifying – was it? There was a lot of pressure because people feel such a sense of ownership over it – including me! I’ve watched it religiously since the reboot. I probably should have stopped looking at Twitter then, but I didn’t. What advice would you give to someone wanting to be a script editor? You don’t need to pay for expen sive courses at film or television school – you can learn on the job. I learnt by working with brilliant script editors and seeing how they did it. There are also lots of film scripts available online – read them and work out why they work. Get in touch with pro duction companies and offer to write script reports for them – that’s often the first step to script editing. I came at it a different way and found it invaluable working my way up on continuing dramas; I would highly recommend it. You could also start as a runner, to get your foot in the door and then try to move into script editing that way. Where do you see your career going?
Fiona McAllister was interviewed by Matthew Bell. Nolly ITV
The Lord of the Rings: The Rings of Power
House of the Dragon and The Rings of Power (also a prequel) launch within a couple of weeks of each other. How ever, Hilton thinks there is room for Two of the biggest shows of the year, House of the Dragon and The Rings of Power, provide much more than mere escapism, says Tara Conlan
Whereas GoT had humanoid White Walkers and giants, “we have dragons and that’s about it. If we could treat dragons like a combination of horses and weapons of mass destruction, then I feel we could get into the real drama of the Noveliststory.”and GoT fan Amanda Craig says she is amazed that fantasy is “still something of a dirty secret among literary folk like me who love it. I see it as part of a great literary tradition that includes Homer and also Shakespeare’s more magical plays.” Craig thinks it can also satirise or highlight contemporary social and political issues in a way other genres find harder – and it enables audiences to “feel you’re seeing the truth, but not directly… through a glass darkly, as it were. I think it touches tremendously deep aspects of the human heart and imagination and also has this powerful ability to kind of address a lot of con temporary concerns, but at an oblique angle.”Actor Lloyd Owen, who plays Elendil in The Rings of Power, thinks part of the appeal is down to Tolkien. He had a “profound influence” on the modernday genre, as he “essentially curated, condensed and revivified ancient Celtic and European mythological tales and poured their eternal truths into a story that all could access”. That was helped on The Rings of Power by the “mind-blowing scale and aston ishing attention to detail” during film ing. He says that “seeing the set of the capital city of Númenor for the very first time was very, very special”.
House of the Dragon is a prequel to Game of Thrones (GoT), set 200 years prior to the original and based on George RR Martin’s book Fire and Blood Its co-showrunner, director and exec utive producer, Miguel Sapochnik, agrees that escapism is part of the appeal but tells Television that House of the Dragon “is more rooted in reality than the previous show”.
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VideoPrimeAmazon
The power of fantasy M agic and myths have ruled popular culture for years. Such is their enduring power that HBO and Sky Atlantic’s Game of Thrones spin-off, House of the Dragon, and Amazon’s The Lord of the Rings: The Rings of Power are big weapons in the wars between the global streaming giants. But why does high-fantasy drama continue to resonate and pull in huge audiences?
Boyd Hilton, Heat magazine entertainment director, thinks there is a “huge appetite” for these shows, partly because fans can lose themselves in a “whole universe meticulously built” by the authors who wrote the books they are based on. “If you go back to Tolkien and other authors, such as CS Lewis, there has always been a history of this type of fantasy story.”
11Television www.rts.org.uk September 2022 both, adding that Netflix also has high-profile fantasy series, including The Sandman and The Witcher. He says: “The investment pays off even though the figures are eye-watering. Report edly, Amazon paid the Tolkien estate around £200m just for the rights to make TV series related to Lord of the Rings.Hilton” believes it was a “no brainer” for HBO to make House of the Dragon, despite its “epic” cost, because Game of Thrones was a worldwide hit when first shown, and many new fans watch reruns on Sky Atlantic. Sapochnik, who won an Emmy for his work on GoT, says he did not feel under pressure to create another hit, despite the huge expectations: “It’s like some people don’t feel pain… I don’t have the pressure of those kind of things. I don’t care. That’s why you’re hired.”Thenumbers show what an immense feat it was: 10 months of filming, with a 2,000-strong crew working across three countries, 5,000 costumes and four directors. All during a pandemic. Covid was the show’s biggest chal lenge, admits Sapochnik. “The logistics were a nightmare, [they] were exhaust ing [but] one of the... most complex and hardest-to-fathom things was what it did to us.” At the beginning of the pan demic, the production had a weekly meeting for crew who knew or were related to people who had died of Covid to help with any mental health issues. “So, you’re dealing with helping people to cope with the grief but also keeping working. Then, over time... that compassion started to ebb away and there was this slight meanness that started to exist, which was, ‘I have to look after my own... I don’t have time for this any more’. And that was even harder. So I lament that.”
“I watched it recently at a screening and found it really disturbing. I know that’s a good thing because the point hasn’t been lost.” n House of the Dragon
Sky Dragon, by contrast, is about one family, mostly in one area, which “allows us to spend more time with the characters and get deeper into them. The whole first season is about the dissolution of the Targaryen family.” Sapochnik hopes that “if you haven’t seen Game of Thrones, then you don’t need to… this is a story about the decline of an empire and everyone likes a good Titanic story.” Game of Thrones was notorious for its often extreme violence, and its prequel is unafraid to make its audience wince, but Sapochnik says it is used to make a point. Two graphic storylines are inter twined – a butchered caesarean forced on the queen and men killing each other in a tournament – to show that “the birthing bed is a woman’s battleground. We needed the birth to be as treacher ous, dangerous and violent as the battle taking place in the tournament.
“Then it turned out that the timber used to construct sets cost more because, during the pandemic, no one was chopping timber.” Fortunately, part of the plan for House of the Dragon has been to “pull back” from the massive scale of its predecessor, says Sapochnik – “start ing smaller because otherwise you’ve got nowhere to go”. Partly, this has been due to “the big difference” between the two shows in that the original “spanned multiple families over multiple continents”.
Despite all the precautions, “we finally got hit by Omicron in Decem ber; we lost 80 people in one week and it shut us down.” This highlighted another issue. Unlike GoT, which was shot in Northern Ireland, House of the Dragon’s main lot was in Leavesden, Hertfordshire. And the post-pandemic production boom had led to a shortage of trained workers. As Sapochnik explains, “There are not enough people with the skill sets to facilitate the number of shows being made because we have a boom in the television industry… around 450 shows are being made, or something insane – we don’t have enough crews to make that many shows.” He declines to reveal the costs but says: “We had a Covid budget. Without it, we’d have fallen at the first hurdle, prettySincemuch.”histime on GoT – which was “huge and I did a 129-day shoot for just two episodes – everything’s got more expensive.… The costs of the sets were coming in and they were just ridiculous, they were astronomical. I thought: this just can’t be. I know we’re not in North ern Ireland any more, which is cheaper, but it was incredibly expensive.
“In one of them, two guys are bash ing each other’s brains in for no reason whatsoever. In the other, this woman is fighting for her life and essentially being murdered by her husband.
Game changer for TV sport
M
July 2022. I’m part of the largest crowd ever seen at a European Cham pionship final, men’s or women’s, as the Lionesses face old foes Germany at Wembley. Despite the historic rivalry, the atmosphere is one of pure celebra tion. No boos echo as the opposing team sings their national anthem.
Caitlin Danaher lauds the Lionesses’ success and assesses how television coverage of other women’s sports might benefit
12
ay 2016. Tears cascade at the King Power Sta dium as Andrea Bocelli serenades a sea of ecstatic, incredulous Leicester City fans. We’ve achieved the impossible, our team of giant-slaying underdogs have toppled the phenomenally rich “top six” Goli aths of modern-day football, defying odds of 5,000/1 to lift the Premier League trophy. It’s surely the most historic football moment I will ever experience. At 18, my life as a football fan has peaked.
Chloe Kelly (right) after scoring the winning goal of the Euro 2022 final
WireBrady/PAJonathan
Instead, a record-breaking 87,192 fans prepare to savour a game that, regard less of the result, will go down in history as a watershed moment for women’s football. An audacious dink from Ella Toone. A scrappy goal sensationally celebrated by Chloe Kelly. The Lionesses defeat eight-time winners Germany 2-1 to clinch England’s first major interna tional trophy for 56 years. Having been banned by the FA for half a century, denied the opportunity to play in school, faced with years of underfund ing, misogyny, abuse and indifference, it’s England’s women who finally bring football home. At 24, my life as a foot ball fan is only just beginning. The Euros final reached an audience peak of 17.4 million on BBC One, with a further 5.9 million watching online – by some distance, the most watched
13Television www.rts.org.uk September 2022
Eloise plays for Crystal Palace under14s. Like her favourite player, Fran Kirby, she’s a central midfielder with an appetite for smashing in goals from 25 yards out. Last season, her goal tally ran to double figures.
When I ask her what she can imagine being when she grows up other than a professional footballer, she looks puzzled, wracking her brain, before replying, ‘Nothing’.
Having been to three women’s FA cup finals and several WSL games, the Euros have been another inspirational experience for Eloise, who hopes that, one day, she can play for England and even win a world cup.
Shouting over the thunderous crowd, England captain Leah Williamson’s post-match interview to BBC Sport contained a rousing proclamation for the millions watching at home: ‘I tell you what, the kids are alright’. With role models like these, they certainly will be.
England
A whole new audience has been brought to women’s football thanks to the BBC’s unprecedented TV coverage.
women’s football game on UK televi sion, ever. “In 2009, the women’s Euros total TV reach was 2.5 million. Fast forward and we’re now seeing the reach for the 2022 Euros at 27.4 mil lion,” says the BBC’s head of TV sport, Philip Bernie. “This summer really was a game-changer. Women’s football will never be the same again.” For the uninitiated, the explosion of the sport and its stars this summer may seem to have come from nowhere, but it has been building for years. In 2017, 4 million viewers tuned in to Channel 4 to watch the Netherlands knock out England in the Uefa women’s Euro semi-final. “It looks a little bit small fry now, but it was a big moment in terms of women’s football, and that was a big risk that the channel took at the time,” says Channel 4’s commission ing editor for sport, Joe Blake-Turner. Since then, the women’s game has been the fastest-growing sport on TV. Last year, the women’s domestic game received a huge boost when the FA Women’s Super League signed a land mark broadcast deal with Sky and the BBC. The mixture of paid and free-toair television offered the league both a significant investment and a huge rise in exposure, as broadcast audiences increased by Meanwhile,258%.DAZN secured the hugely coveted global rights for the Uefa Wom en’s Champions League (WCL). As part of the four-season deal, the streamer has partnered with YouTube to make the first two years available free. It’s the first time Uefa has centralised all Wom en’s Champions League matches glob ally; viewership figures for season one are impressive, with fans tuning in from 230Ofterritories.course,the timing of DAZN’s deal with Uefa is no happy accident. With this year’s Euros and next year’s World Cup, DAZN hopes to capitalise on the peak in interest in women’s football to add new subscribers.
“We knew that this momentum and this emphasis was coming, and we structured our deal accordingly,” says Katie Smith, VP of rights partner relations at DAZN. “It’s just exploded, which is brilliant for us. We’re looking forward to seeing how that translates into viewership, both on YouTube and on DAZN.” Fans looking to follow up on their favourite Euros players will find many of them in the WCL, including finalists Lucy Bronze (Barcelona Femení) and Young Player of the Tournament Lena Oberdorf (Vfl Wolfsburg). Yet, as 80% � captain
‘You have all set an example that will be an inspiration for girls and women today, and for future generations.’ So read the Queen’s congratulatory mes sage to the Lionesses. One phrase, repeated countless times by presenters and pundits alike over the course of the Euros, summa rised the transcendent hopes for the tournament’s legacy: ‘If you can see it, you can be it.’
Inspired by the Lionesses’ heroics, the next generation of women footballers will be entering a new world. This will be a world where women’s football can pack the biggest sta dium in the UK, where it’s normal to air a women’s match on prime-time TV – and where an English team can actually win. Now, thousands of young girls can dare to dream of lifting a major foot ball trophy for their country. One such hopeful is 13-year-old Eloise Mitchell, who lives and breathes football.
‘If you can see it, you can be it’
Leah Williamson SportBT
The history-making Champions League quarter-final against archrivals Real Madrid would mark the highest attendance ever seen at a women’s football game, only for Bar celona to break that record once more in their semi-final against Wolfsburg. The possibilities for the women’s game to produce its own icons are endless, if only they are given the time and investment by national broadcasters.
The Hundred, which was shown across the BBC and Sky this summer, has also been a boon to cricket. Designed with gender parity at its heart, the competition sees teams with both men and women’s squads playing in the same grounds, often in back-to-back matches.
Women’s Six Nations 2022 England vs Ireland
Elsewhere,October.women’s
The corporation stole a march in 2017, so might Channel 4 throw its hat in the ring? Its commissioning editor for sport is giving nothing away, but the goal is to remain very much in the space of women’s sport.
The key to this will be constructing a mythology: after all, what is football without theatre? “We have to start telling more stories about the players, building more narratives,” says Smith, “so that fans aren’t just watching the highlights and seeing the incredible goals, they’re being given a compel ling reason to watch, and they have a ‘why’ to get into the women’s game.”
Take DAZN’s spotlight on Ballon d’Or winner Alexia Putellas of Barce lona Femení. A 10-year-old girl wit nesses football’s greats, Ronaldinho, Eto’o, Zidane and Ronaldo, battle it out in the El Clásico 2004. Years later, she is playing in front of a sold-out crowd of 91,553 at Camp Nou in her own El Clásico.
cricket has also experienced a huge influx of investment. The prize money for the ICC Women’s Cricket World Cup 2022 was raised to $3.5m, up 75% on 2017. Sky recently announced that it would extend its broadcast deal with the ECB for another four years. This will give England Women a defined scheduling commitment for the first time, with two T20 internationals screening free-to-air.
“The cat’s out the bag now, every one’s on it,” says Channel 4’s BlakeTurner. “So, we’ll have to develop a different tactic. But it’s clearly the place to be.”
14 RugbyEngland
The Women’s Sports Trust reports that viewing figures increased by 627% on last year, making it the most-watched Women’s Six Nations on record. Such stats will be music to the ears of ITV, which secured the rights for the Women’s Rugby World Cup, which is being held in New Zea land this
The competition launched in 2021 with a standalone women’s game broadcast live on the BBC, during which thousands of tickets to other women’s games were sold. “What the Hundred has done for the women’s game is almost immeasurable. The visibility that it provided the women’s game last year was incredible,” says Parfitt.Expect to see some serious bids for the rights to next year’s Fifa Women’s World Cup, which Parfitt describes as “one of the UK’s crown jewels”. She adds: “I think that the BBC is going to have real competition on its hands from ITV, which saw the enormous audience the BBC had [for the final]. It’s going to be interesting to see how that plays out,” she says.
The success in women’s football has been a rallying cry to governing bodies, the media and brands to show what is possible, with exponential growth in other sports very likely to follow.
So, what happens next? While the excitement around women’s football has been spectacular, sports rights specialist Sarah Parfitt warns that change won’t happen overnight: “It’s going to take a few cycles of rights deals before the domestic clubs become financially sustainable. That’s a bit of a wake-up call to realise how far it is we’ve still got to go.
“The more the commercial invest ment from brands, the better the rights deals and the more tickets that are sold, the more financially sustain able the domestic clubs will be,” she adds. “Effectively, that is the same equation across all women’s sports.”
Women’s rugby has already seen enormous growth this year with the huge success of the Six Nations. Rather than running the women’s competition alongside the men’s as a secondary brand, the BBC gave it a separate window in April. The final round of games aired on BBC Two gave the sport crucial space and visi bility in the broadcast schedule.
� of WCL audiences are male, DAZN’s next challenge is to find a way to bring in more female viewers.
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15Television www.rts.org.uk September 2022 DiscoveryBrosWarner
The company’s brands in Europe include Warner Bros Pictures, Warner Bros Television, HBO and HBO Max, Discovery Channel, Discovery+, CNN, Eurosport, Cartoon Network, Adult Swim, Food Network, Quest, Really, Animal Planet, TLC, ID, HGTV, and Turner Classic Movies. In other words, Dogra oversees a portfolio embracing streaming, mov ies, sports, TV networks and home entertainment, as well as program ming and local production. Despite her remarkable career, she is largely unknown to many in the British television community; the bulk of her working life has been spent across the Atlantic, in Canada and, more recently, the US. There she ran Time Warner’s global mergers and acquisitions team from New York during a pivotal time in the company’s evolution. She was a key figure in the company’s $109bn merger with AT&T. Earlier, in 2014, she success fully defended Time Warner against 20th Century Fox’s hostile bid. This relative anonymity in the UK is about to change with her chairing of the RTS London Convention, “The fight for attention”. In fact, she returned to work in London in November 2020 as President, WarnerMedia EMEA and Asia (excluding China) just as the UK was bracing itself for another pro longed Covid-19-induced lockdown.
A very mediamodernmogul
“In retrospect, it wasn’t the best timing,” she recalls. “We were in lock down for something like six months. Here I was, in a city I hadn’t lived in for over a decade, managing a new job and trying to do it all from the �
RTS London Convention Chair Priya Dogra’s track record in billion-dollar deals gives her a unique perspective on today’s media landscape, says Steve Clarke Priya Dogra
F or an Indian-born enter tainment executive who has spent much of her life working for Time Warner in New York, Priya Dogra needs no reminding that today’s television businesses operating at scale have no option but to think globally. “Nowa days, hit shows come from all over the world,” she says. Dogra, 43, was the big winner of the recent Warner Bros Discovery inter national reshuffle and, as the London-based President and Manag ing Director for EMEA, she leads one of the key international divisions of the newly merged behemoth.
It is Monday morning, and she is speaking to me over Zoom from her home where she is working today. Although she doesn’t explicitly say so, I suspect some of her weekend was spent working. As a former investment banker employed by Citigroup, 100-hour working weeks were the norm. As she grapples with imple menting the merger of Discovery and WarnerMedia in Europe, the demands on her time must be considerable. As for her own viewing habits, over the weekend she’s been bingeing on The Wire from HBO, The Marvelous Mrs Maisel and she admits an addiction to Channel 4’s Come Dine with Me. “I watch an inordinate amount. It’s a show I can put on any time and enjoy.”
As the title of this year’s London Convention implies, one of the chal lenges common to all entertainment entities, from Netflix to the BBC, is how to cut through the plethora of content and persuade audiences not to be so promiscuous in their viewing choices, and thus allow media businesses to satisfy their shareholders. But, in such a dynamic business as television, there is nothing new about having to compete for people’s atten tion, I suggest. “This is not a new bat tle,” she agrees, “but I would argue the fight for attention has become more intense. We’ve seen streaming services proliferate, which gives consumers more choice than ever before. “We also face competition from outside the industry, whether it’s gam ing, TikTok or YouTube. The competi tion set has expanded.
“How do you use different platforms like social media to support the core businesses?”Thisworld teeming with content is a universe away from the conservative media environment Dogra grew up with in Delhi in the 1990s. Before cable TV and foreign investment arrived, there were just two indigenous chan nels on the TV menu. For a child, the week’s televisual highlight was an hour of cartoons every Saturday. But as multichannel TV emerged and she encountered American shows for the first time, she witnessed “the abil ity of media not just to reflect a society, but to actually shape it”.
“Three years into the degree, I realised I didn’t have the passion for computer science. I realised it wasn’t going to be my career and that I wanted to be involved in business,” she recalls. Landing a job at Citigroup’s Technol ogy, Media and Telecoms group (Time Warner was a client) she spent seven years based in the New York, London and Toronto offices.
“I was young, restless and ambitious, and wanted to live in some different cities. It seemed to be a job that would make use of my skills. I’m built to be analytical and to work hard. I like learning new things.” She adds: “I really enjoyed my time in banking. You come in with a cohort of peers and you share some formative experiences. Some of the people I worked with then are still among my closest friends.
And Just Like That…
She is a fluent communicator who would give Apple Europe creative director Jay Hunt a run for her money in any competition to identify London’s fastest-talking media executive.
Dogra’s desire to see the world and her family roots (her parents had lived in Canada before she was born) per suaded her to leave India and attend the University of Toronto, where she read commerce and computer science.
16 � comfort of my home office. That was not how I envisaged either my move or taking on a new role. The first six months were very challenging.”
“So, as a business and as an industry, we need to think and act differently. How do you start to differentiate your self with your content, with your IP, with your brands, and break through as part of the social conversation, when there are so many shows being produced? “People burn through a series a week and then you never hear from them again. We need to think about what sort of content we invest in to meet what the audience is demanding, where we invest, how we exploit our shows across different platforms.
“Loads of people at my school went into accounting,” she notes. “It wasn’t something I was particularly interested in. I had some friends and family who had done investment banking.
TVNow
The RTS London Convention 2022 takes place on 27 September. Mare of Easttown TVNow
“We release movies, we have net works, we have services. The first question is: which platform are you producing for and how do you window that content so that it moves from cinema to, say, networks, and, within that, how do we decide what to produce?“Look,our job is to find the best stories, to showcase storytellers, to showcase talent, and it is less about how many shows we produce… The quality of the shows and the quality of the storytelling are paramount.
“This job involves long hours but you’re responsible for teams, I’m responsible for people, I’m responsible for the business. It involves an emo tional responsibility that you don’t have when you’re younger.”
17Television www.rts.org.uk September 2022
Her curiosity paid off. Six years later she was leading the department. One of several coups was persuading online video specialist iStreamPlanet to accept Time Warner’s nearly $200m offer, beating rivals Comcast and Adobe. She was reportedly one of only four company insiders to know about the initial negotiations for Time Warner’s proposed merger with AT&T and a key negotiator for the deal, internally codenamed Rabbit as a homage to Bugs Bunny.Previously, she had overseen the company’s investment in Hulu, led Time Warner’s talks for taking a stake in central and eastern European broad caster CME, and acquired premium football rights in Chile and Argentina. Her next rung up the corporate lad der was being appointed head of strat egy and corporate development. She advised two successive CEOs, John Stankey and Jason Kilar. Of this role, she explains that it involved “looking ahead three to five years and asking, what are the things that we should be doing as an industry that people doing their day-to-day jobs might not be thinking about”. To return to the present, and the vital question of identifying content that cuts through: “How do we select the right kind of content to invest in? As a combined company, Warner Bros Dis covery has a huge portfolio. We oper ate across scripted and unscripted and across film and TV. We also have dif ferent platforms.
“I’m not sure there is an answer to exactly how we decide it. But we sort of have a process by which we partner with storytellers and bring things to life in a way that we believe we do differently to others.”
In 2009, she joined Time Warner’s mergers and acquisitions group. “These jobs are very much what you make them,” she reflects. “Your experience can be as narrow or as wide as you want it to be. I took the opportunity to wander around the company and ask people questions to find out how things work and what they do as a way to better understand both the detail and the big picture.”
“When we look at our portfolio, it is not just shows and movies that build on the IP we have. We have DC Com ics, Hanna-Barbera, Harry Potter… We have lots of franchises that sit within our business, but it’s also about how you service new stories and how you create completely new worlds.
“Also, you want to create shows that people go back to. Some examples of some shows that really cut through: Succession, Game of Thrones, And Just Like That…, the sequel to Sex and the City. People then went back and watched Sex and the City. This fall, we have House of the Dragon coming out, which, by the way, is “Thesefantastic.areshows that have cut through and become part of the con versation. If you remember, in one of the lockdowns last year pretty much everyone in the UK was watching Mare of Easttown.” We are seeing something of an arms race as, post-lockdown, the sheer amount of production has reached stratospheric heights – but, with the prospect of a recession, can the eye-watering sums being invested in content stay at this level? “Investors are no longer as tolerant of a lack of profits for a long period of time as they once were. They are demanding busi ness models that are sustainable over shorter periods of time than people had“Thereanticipated.aresomany shows being produced, so how do you produce shows that break through? No creator wants a show to appear on the carousel and then no one hears from it again. This doesn’t mean that there won’t be robust levels of production, but it will mean that the pace of growth will cer tainlyHaveslow.”wethen reached peak scripted? “It’s a hard question to answer,” she concedes, “because a decade ago John Landgraf from FX said we’d reached peak scripted, and we continued to grow from that base.
In TV, what’s cutting through right now? “You want to tell stories that people watch in the moment, and they become part of the social conversation, because people like watching shows that other people are watching. That water-cooler effect, right?
“I do think the change in investor sentiment means there will be a change in how the industry goes for ward. The level of spend cannot con tinue to increase in the unbounded manner that it has.
“If spend is an indication of what the future looks like, then I certainly don’t think the number of shows will con tinue to increase at the pace that it has done.”
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Just five streamer shows – The Big Bang Theory, Friends, Brooklyn Nine-Nine, The Simpsons and the US version of The Office – account for 11% of all SVoD viewing. “For the SVoD services, it’s the new stuff that gets all the headlines but, without these five series, their viewing would decline quite dramati cally,” said Sampson. “[So], to what extent are SVoD services really that different from broadcast services in terms of their reliance on a combina tion of established and new content?” As Sampson promised at an earlier RTS event, in April 2021, Barb is now able to publish viewing figures for SVoD and video-sharing services on the same basis as those for broadcast TV. This enables meaningful compari sons to be made for the first time. Since November, with ratings from the likes of Netflix, Amazon and You Tube joining the linear schedules, Barb has been providing a more complete picture of the nation’s viewing habits. It has taken Barb longer than it would have liked to start measuring SVoD viewing. The TV ratings body has attached a meter, which reads the URL information for the streaming services, to the wi-fi router at the carefully selected 5,300 homes it uses to repre sent all segments of UK society. “If we’d had the [streamers’] engagement and involvement, they could [have] helped us do that more quickly,” said Sampson. He added that Barb aims to increase its viewing panel to 7,000 homes, which it should achieve by early 2024. Barb is using a new definition of “total identified viewing”. This is the sum of the time spent watching linear broadcast channels and broadcasterowned VoD services, 19 streamers (both SVoD and advertising-supported VoD) and video-sharing platforms such as TikTok and YouTube. Barb captures
18
What’s more, he added, SVoD ser vices “rely on a combination of new and established content” – just like traditional broadcasters. TV needs “fireworks and bonfires”, he said, explaining: “You need to have bright shows that explode into the schedule and create audiences, while you also need to have content that peo ple keep coming back for. This is some thing the broadcasters have relied on for many, many years. And guess what? The SVoD services rely on it as well.”
A ccepted TV wisdom says that
Don’t write off linear yet
Taking the most-watched shows in May, Justin Sampson, CEO of the UK’s TV ratings body, revealed that there was not a single SVoD show in the top 20 programmes when linear viewing was included. ITV thriller DI Ray topped the list, which also included a strong showing from “social glue” programmes, such as the Eurovision Song Contest and Britain’s Got Talent “While the SVoD services can be very pleased with some of the viewing numbers they’re getting, they’d be much happier with the kind of numbers that are still being generated by the linear broadcasters,” said Sampson, speaking at a sold-out RTS London breakfast in July.
Barb’s improved audience measurement system shows the streamers are advancing with brilliant originals but still need the support of evergreens ITV DI Ray
ingUSarebroadcasting’straditionaldaysnumbered,andthestreamersaretakover.Uptoapoint, yes, but there’s still plenty of life left in television’s old guard. And no less an authority than Barb says so.
Some 98% of total broadcast viewing is on a TV set; likewise, 87% of Netflix viewing. TikTok content is at the other extreme, with 94% watched on smart phones. Perhaps surprisingly, YouTube does have a significant TV presence, at around 25%.
19Television www.rts.org.uk September 2022 viewing across four screens — TV sets, tablets, PCs and smartphones – but for streaming and video-sharing services, it can only count viewers via home wi-fi networks. More on which later.
Any parents worried that their teen age children may be addicted to videosharing platforms should stop reading this paragraph now – “10% of YouTube viewers account for half of all its view ing,” said Sampson. Adults, though, are guilty of bingeing, too – 45% of the 28-day audience for the Ricky Gervais Netflix show After Life watched all of the last series within four days of its release in January. Streamers may not be pushing the linear broadcasters off the TV sofa, but they are taking up more room. Accord ing to Barb, 19.6 million homes now subscribe to a SVoD service – a little over two-thirds of the UK’s 28.5 mil lion homes. The most popular is Net flix, followed by Amazon; the fastest growing is Disney+ (see Chart 2).
concluded: “We’ve got open conversations. Are they going as quickly as I would like? No, but they’re not dead.”
But Barb figures tell a different story.
Q1 Tablets2022 Viewing in May 2022 – all aged 4+ Chart 1: Barb’s new definition – total identified viewing Source: Barb Establishment Survey SmartphonesTVPCssets 224 dailyminutes44 minutesdaily32 minutesdaily148 dailyminutes 98.7%62.6m78.6%49.8m74.9%47.5m91.6%58.1m Monthly four-screen reach: broadcasterTotal SVoD/AVoDTotal Totalsharingvideo identifiedTotal than our counterparts on continental Europe.”
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For May, total identified viewing amounted to 224 minutes a day for everyone aged four-plus, comprised of 148 minutes watching traditional broadcasters; 32 minutes for the streamers; and 44 minutes for videosharing services (see Chart 1).
Some 13.2 million homes have at least two streaming services, about which Sampson opined: “That is on the increase… there is still evidence that people are adding SVoD subscrip tions to their portfolio.” Though, as the cost-of-living crisis bites hard this winter, streamers my find they start to loseMuchsubscribers.hasbeen written about Netflix being in crisis, having suffered a fall in subscribers and share price this year. In July, Netflix recorded a second quar terly drop in subscriber growth, losing 1 million viewers in the second quarter, although this number is lower than the 2 million it had originally projected.
“The actual subscription levels are tracking well ahead of Netflix’s [UK] pre-pandemic growth levels,” said Sampson. “I believe that the story of Netflix’s subscriptions being now in decline is not the right story – I think it is still heading for subscription growth.”
Any AppleNowDisney+PrimeAmazonNetflixSVoDVideoTVTV+ 2014 2015 2016 2017 2018 2019 2020 2021 20m15m10m5m Number of households with at least one subscription Chart 2: 19.6 million homes subscribed to an SVoD service in Q1 2022 Reliable 2020 figures are
SVoD ratings
Source:
Report by Matthew Bell. The RTS London event ‘Breakfast with Barb: Understand ing what people watch’ was held at the Soho Hotel in central London on 7 July. It was chaired by the journalist and broad caster Nadine Dereza, and produced by RTS London Chair Phil Barnes.
There are gaps in Barb’s figures –most notably it is unable to collect viewing data on streaming and videosharing services watched outside the home. “It would be great to have more involvement from the streamers, who are, at the moment, a bit at arm’s length,” said Sampson. “It’s not a straightforward conversa tion,” he continued. “These companies are American and they are looking to do things in a way that’s consistent across all markets. While the UK is an important market, the UK, as far as the Americans are concerned, is a part of Europe and we’re a bit further ahead in terms of what we’re doing in the UK unavailable due to the impact of the pandemic on Barb’s information gathering. Barb Establishment Survey. In fact, only the US, where Nielsen provides comparable data, has similar to those provided bySampsonBarb.
5ChannelNeighbours
Channel 5 boss Ben Frow, chief content officer of channel owner Para mount UK, seemed happy enough: “I suspect there wasn’t a dry eye among the viewers as Neighbours bowed out on a high last night,” he told The Guardian. “I’m sure it will remain in people’s hearts and TV memories for a long time to come.” He may miss the rat ings,Lastthough.March, another long-running show, BBC One hospital drama Holby City, had its life support turned off after 23 years and more than 1,100 episodes. Its ending was “dignified”, wrote The Guardian’s Hannah Verdier, with the weekly drama “going out gracefully… no big disaster, no bomb, no gunman on the loose – just a beautifully and subtly played goodbye”. An autopsy would record money and politics on their death certificates –Neighbours was largely funded by Channel 5, which wants to concentrate its resources on more upmarket, home-grown drama, while Holby City (shot at Elstree Studios in Hertford shire) fell victim to the BBC’s drive to make its programme-making more regionally diverse. When the plug is finally pulled on a TV show, the reason is rarely artistic. Falling ratings, audience ennui, the death of a star actor or the writer, scandal, the above-mentioned money and politics… pretty much anything except the realisation that a show is no longer much good. Creative decline is usually slow. More rarely, a show “jumps the shark”, succumbing to stunts and novelty as inspiration dries up. This phrase is a Why do channels find it so hard to say goodbye to a series?
eighbours finally checked out over the summer, 37 years and nearly 9,000 epi sodes after the resi dents of Ramsay Street first drew TV breath. The long-running Aussie soap, lat terly shown on Channel 5 in the UK, didn’t slip away quietly – Kylie Minogue and Jason Donovan returned as Charlene and Scott Robinson, as did Hollywood stars Guy Pearce and Mar got Robbie, who began their careers in the fictional town of Erinsborough. Even fan favourite character Madge Bishop came back from the dead for the double-episode finale, which drew a peak audience of 3 million to Chan nel 5 at the end of July – the highest audience for the show since the station began screening it in 2008.
When to pull the plug N
Matthew Bell has a few ideas
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Some series refuse to die. Ditched first by Channel 4 and then Channel 5, Orwellian TV nightmare Big Brother is set to return to ITV2 next year. Eventually, if the plug isn’t pulled on a programme, it can become a TV institution. Eight have racked up 60-plus, unbroken years on British TV. BBC current affairs programme Pano rama is the oldest, having been on air since the year of the Queen’s coronation, 1953.
Shows undeservedly killed off can find new life on a new channel. Once upon a time, when TV channels were few and far between, this was more difficult, though Simon Nye’s laddish sitcom Men Behaving Badly, after flop ping on ITV, found fame and fortune on BBC One in the 1990s.
21Television www.rts.org.uk September 2022 reference to a ludicrous episode from 1970s and 1980s US sitcom Happy Days, in which the Fonz (Henry Winkler), in trademark leather jacket, jumped over a shark on water skis. Mostly, though, shows struggle on, even when they have become a pale shadow or worse, a parody, of their former selves. Killing Eve is perhaps the best recent example of a series that lost its way yet was allowed to con tinue while audience interest flagged.
Decades ago, John Cleese was another who knew when to say enough, ending what became the nation’s favourite sitcom, Fawlty Towers, after just two series and 12 episodes.
Channel 4 cancelled Top Boy and that appeared to be the end for the gritty London crime series, created by cele brated Irish writer Ronan Bennett and starring Ashley Walters. Yet, six years later, encouraged by Canadian rapper and super-fan Drake, Netflix brought it back. Drake even nabbed himself an executive producer credit on the returning series.
Meanwhile, Lee Mack’s under whelming Not Going Out – currently the longest-running sitcom on UK telly – recently notched up its 12th series on BBC One. In pre-streaming days, when a show appeared in the schedules for one night only, poor overnight ratings would kill it off before it had the chance to build an audience. A programme that might have built on a creatively promising, if underperforming, first series never got the chance to do so. This is rarer nowadays, but it still happens. Semi-Detached, a far superior Lee Mack sitcom, was axed last year after just one series on BBC Two. Many critics liked it – “a masterclass in cha otic comedy”, said The Guardian – but it was sunk by poor audiences; its over night ratings were only around 400,000Generally,viewers.with the advent of BBC iPlayer, All 4, Netflix, Disney+ and the rest of the streaming world, a pro gramme now has more time to find its feet. Word of mouth or social media chit-chat can create a buzz, and on-demand audiences can grow.
“Not so much a cat-and-mouse game between Villanelle and Eve as a mog gie chasing its tail in circles,” said Ben Dowell, TV writer at The Times, com menting on this year’s fourth and, thankfully, final series. Even Steven Knight’s hitherto majestic Peaky Blinders meandered during its final run, perhaps missing family matriarch Polly Gray, following the death of the wonderful Helen McCrory. It remained a visual and aural treat, but the narrative frequently feltFactualconfused.entertainment programmes tend to go on for ever; some deserv edly, such as The Great British Bake Off, which has been on air for 12 years and almost 150 episodes; others less so, like The Apprentice. To be fair to BBC com missioners, The Apprentice’s ratings have held up remarkably well over 17 years and 200-plus episodes. On average, episodes averaged 7 million viewers across this year’s series as, once again, Lord Sugar fired a succession of hope lessThenarcissists.criticswere less kind. “This clapped-out format is looking more knackered than its 74-year-old figure head,” wrote The Daily Telegraph’s Michael Hogan. He suggested that the BBC “either put it out of its misery or demand a major revamp to drag it into the 21st century”. Too few telly people know when to finish a series. Ricky Gervais is one who does. From his first show, The Office, to his most recent, After Life, none has outstayed their welcome. On stopping the latter after three short series on Netflix, Gervais said: “It seems mad on every level, but I think it’s the right decision artistically. It’s a finite story, and that’s its strength.”
Victorian crime drama Ripper Street, starring Matthew Macfadyen, MyAnna Buring and Jerome Flynn, immediately found a new backer in Amazon Prime when the BBC unaccountably axed it.
A few are niche – The Sky at Night and Welsh-language religious series Dechrau Canu, Dechrau Canmol – but the country would rise from its sofa as one if either the Eurovision Song Contest, Coronation Street or Blue Peter were axed. Commissioners wouldn’t dare – would they? n BBCKilling Eve
F or more than two years, the scene here in Ireland has been dark and gloomy. The pandemic has cast its pall across the land scape, particularly over the fields of entertainment –theatre, film, TV and video. Now we are emerging, blinking, into the sun again and, very quickly, all is busy, busy, busy. Celebrities such as Tom Cruise, Russell Crowe, Bill Murray, Matthew Broderick and Sarah Jessica Parker have been spot ted across the island but, for sheer glittering global star power, nothing can beat the Obamas, whose latest production, Bodkin, is shooting in West Cork, Dublin and Wicklow. Described as “a darkly comedic thriller”, it is the first scripted TV series from their production com pany, Higher Ground, and one of several shows it is making for Netflix. On the film scene, all the buzz surrounds An Cailín Ciúin (The Quiet Girl), Colm Bairéad’s beautiful and moving film based on a short story by Claire Keegan. It has been described as “an instant classic”. According to one insider, it marks a turning point in the Irish film industry, especially for productions in the Irish language. It is also a success story for TG4, Ireland’s Irish-language channel, whose film offshoot, Cine4, is a major funder. This will be Ireland’s entry for the International Features category at the next Oscars. We have great hopes for this one. On the television front, both TG4 and Virgin Media have launched new Agnes Cogan identifies a possible future Oscar winner as the Irish screen sector adds new production capacity TV channels: Virgin Media’s is a gen eral entertainment channel, while TG4’s is for children. To support all this extra program ming and production, planning is under way for two major TV and film studios – in Mullingar, in the Mid lands, and in Greystones, a seaside resort in County Wicklow, about 30km south of Dublin. Each claims it will be the biggest studio complex in the country. We’ll see. In any case, these initiatives will provide more work for crews and technicians, and added capacity for production companies, all of which will be very welcome.
The Pope’s Exorcist, starring Russell Crowe, is seeking extras; Sanctuary deals with present-day witchcraft and is a co-production with AMC and Monument TV, among others. At the other end of the scale, in Galway, as part of the summer’s Gal way City of Film Festival, 10 teams competed to write, shoot and edit a five-minute film in just 48 hours. Sponsored by TG4, this was the fifth year that the 48-hour challenge has been held. In other news, Paul Mescal, break out star of Normal People, has been kept busy. His latest film, God’s Crea tures, also starring Emily Watson, was selected at Cannes, and will be shown in cinemas at the end of September.
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The crime series Kin, Ireland’s most successful TV drama of 2021, starring Aidan Gillen and Ciarán Hinds, has been given the go-ahead for a second and third series. These are being shot back to back this year, and provide lots of welcome work for local actors, technicians and production staff. All this and an announcement by the redoubtable Sir David Attenbor ough, now 96, who is to present a nature series for BBC One, Wild Isles, on the wildlife of Britain and Ireland. The programme will be filmed here and in Britain over three years and will feature “extraordinary animal dramas and wildlife spectacles” to demonstrate the challenges to nature and the global importance of some of the wildlife on these islands. More power to him!
CoganAgnes
Agnes Cogan is Chair of RTS Republic of Ireland.
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IRELANDOURFRIENDIN
As befits a scene emerging from the shadows, many of the productions underway have a supernatural aura:
But, as the effects of man-made climate change become alarmingly ubiquitous, is there a growing � Searching for snow leopards: co-productionUKTV/BBC/PBSKyrgyzstan: Expedition Mountain Ghost UKTV
23Television www.rts.org.uk September 2022
Steve Clarke investigates how wildlife makersprogramme-areworkingtocuttheircarbonfootprint
Natural history’s green challenge S even years ago, docu mentary producer Tom Mustill was kayaking with a friend in Monte rey Bay, California, when an adult humpback whale breached beside them, landing on their kayak. They were forced underwater and narrowly avoided being crushed by the whale. Fortu nately, he and his friend escaped uninjured.Today,Mustill is one of a growing number of wildlife film-makers and production company owners who are determined to ward off an even big ger threat than animal encounters in the wild and, by making films that are genuinely sustainable, play their part in ameliorating the impact of climate change.Anambassador for sustainable pro duction certification scheme Albert and a proponent of low-carbon film-making, Mustill has worked with such committed conservationists as David Attenborough, Greta Thunberg, Stephen Fry and George Monbiot. He co-hosts the podcast So Hot Right Now with journalist Lucy Siegle and, in 2018, produced the first edition of BBC Two’s Natural World strand to receive Albert certification, Humpback Whales: A Detective Story, filmed on the US west coast. Knowing that a return flight to California to film would itself be responsible for emitting more CO2 than many people in the developing world emit in a year, Mustill sat down with his team and came up with ways to reduce the programme’s carbon footprint. “Instead of it coming from the top down, we were forced to think about the things that we were responsible for,” he recalls. “The cam era operator took a small amount of kit and used lightweight gear that took up less space. We persuaded the BBC to take paperless deliverables; our release forms were digital. The whole production used just one reem of paper. We avoided using dispos able batteries or any other disposable pieces of equipment.”
“Reducing our carbon is obviously important, but we also have a huge opportunity to do more with our con tent to help in the current ecological emergency,” says Turner. Should high-end natural history series, which the streamers have embraced with a vengeance, make way for less polluting types of wildlife programmes? “There are definitely new ways of working emerging, many of them in the past two years due to the pandemic,” says Wendy Darke, head of the BBC’s Natural History Unit from 2012 to 2016, when flagship films such as Planet Earth II and Blue Planet II wereTurnermade.believes that, “if we continue to make blue-chip series, we need to be making them in a very different way. Personally, I feel we could be making less of that type and have more variety in the programmes we“Wemake.need to be helping people see BBC that our big-budget international wild life series have the highest carbon footprint of any TV genre, on a par with the big-budget drama feature films.” She adds: “At that point, data col lected by Albert between 2012 and 2020 showed the biggest overall car bon footprint for a wildlife documen tary series was over 2,400 tCO2e [tonnes of CO2 equivalent].
‘HAVE
TELEVISION?’CONSIDEREDEVERTHATWE’REMAKINGTOOMUCH
BBC commission Humpback Whales: A Detective Story
As Mustill says: “The elephant in the room in natural history making is that the elephant is in someone else’s room. Why is it that huge numbers of British people fly from Bristol to film other people’s natural history? Lots of us are aware that this is unsustainable and not very fair. How do we move beyond this model?”
“This was a large-scale international production, with 60% of the impact being travel. It was the equivalent of powering 545 homes for a year.*” FF:W encourages collaboration across the sector to explore ways to * Based on a house’s energy footprint being around 4.4 tCO2e per year. Source: We are Albert, 2020. WE
Ignorance is no longer an excuse: Albert has the facts at its fingertips, says Kristina Turner, an assistant pro ducer and co-founder of grassroots group Filmmakers for Future: Wildlife (FF:W), which boasts more than 250 members in the UK and overseas. “Back in March 2020, we asked Albert to help us clarify the footprint of natural history TV as we’re often lumped in with specialist and/or international factual,” explains Turner. “Albert [said] reduce its footprint – something that Turner stresses is already happening – and at the same time make moreimpactful content and move away from what the group describes as “the extractive film-making model”.
24 � consensus that more far-reaching measures are required by everyone in natural history film-making to move on to a more sustainable footing? It is ironic that the production of blue-chip wildlife documentaries is highly carbon intensive: programme-makers crisscross the globe in search of the perfect shot, even as they seek to reinforce environmental messaging.
However, some in the UK’s natural history film-making community think that more radical action is required to reduce the footprint of wildlife shows.
“There will always be an element of travel involved but, at the moment, we just have this relentless churn of too much content,” says Mustill, who set up Gripping Films in 2012. “Have we ever considered that we’re making too much television?“Everyfilm has a footprint, whether it’s made locally or not. Every time it’s streamed it has a footprint. There’s so much stuff being made. It’s endless. All of this comes at a cost. Should we have some sort of limit on the amount of content that is made?
Also, more meetings are taking place virtually. “We brokered the co-production deal for the Predators premium nature series between Sky and Netflix largely on Zoom,” says Darke. “We’ve shown that you can build business and editorial relationships via video conferencing, which significantly reduces the amount of travel that we might have done otherwise.”
Others, however, maintain that, if there is to be a sea change in making natural history more sustainable, it needs to start at the top.
Cutting down on travel is one way to be more sustainable. Film-makers looking for that elusive footage of a snow leopard or a bird of paradise were forced by the pandemic to fly a lot less. “Covid brought about some thing that was long overdue – giving foreign crews the chance to do some wildlife shoots,” says veteran wildlife cameraman and photographer Doug Allan, best known for his work in the polar regions and underwater. “It is true that the bulk of the talent for these high-end wildlife films is based dis proportionately in the UK, Europe and the US. It doesn’t mean there aren’t talented people elsewhere.”
At the very least, Mustill advocates greater use of recycled footage – a recent film he made for Greta Thun berg, Nature Now, deployed a lot of recycled material. “Reusing existing footage and upcycling it into exciting new content clearly works because it was one of the most viral environmen tal films [it registered more than 80 million views] of all time,” he says.
“Maybe commissioners need to scale back their ideas and to think about the kind of films they want to make from the point of view of, ‘Can we make films that don’t need all the stuff reshot all over again?’ and rely more on archive,” says Allan. “The BBC doesn’t make these films for the good of the planet. It makes them because they make a fortune.” n
An RTS event, ‘Sustainable TV production at home and abroad – myth or reality?’, will be held in central London on 6 December. Sky/Netflix co-production Predators Sky
But isn’t there a temptation to start travelling again simply because human beings are social animals? “Yes, but we need to be mindful of our carbon foot print and I think the way forward involves a hybrid model where we take full advantage of locally based talent and the significant developments that have been made in remote-working technology in the last two years. This approach was illustrated by True to Nature in delivering series 1 of Expedi tion, commissioned by UKTV. “We were the first fully offset BBC series and, by partnering with Natural Capital Partners, a portion of the budget went to support communities in Borneo to help protect orangutans living in the rainforest.”
“Many people make wildlife films because they want to serve nature and share the wonder of the living world. They become disillusioned when they find they’ve joined a massive industry aimed at generating as much content as it can, with companies interested in growing their stake in that.”
25Television www.rts.org.uk September 2022 ourselves as part of nature rather than separate from it.”
Employing more locally based crews, including overseas camera operators, has been “an absolute posi tive”, says Darke, who runs Bristolbased indie True to Nature, which specialises in wildlife and underwater filming. For Shark with Steve Backshall, the company worked with US-based camera operator Duncan Brake, rather than flying out a Brit. Another way to cut a film’s carbon footprint is to shoot share – in other words, use one crew instead of two to film two or more series on the same trip.
Directors have also learnt to work virtually. “We’ve been directing camera ops in the Pacific Islands, admittedly at 2:00am, on Zoom, and we’ve proved that this can be done successfully.”
With more and more broadcasters and streamers signing up to net zero pledges by 2030, production companies have an incentive to offset the carbon they create when they make a show.
I
Aidan Turner as Dr Joe O’Loughlin in The Suspect ITV
We see this played out in a nail-biting scene in the first episode, in which O’Loughlin, the honest chap he appears, visits Ruiz at the police station to vol unteer the information that he was near the graveyard where the body was found. But, as they speak, Ruiz finds out that O’Loughlin has been lying about another aspect of the investigation. The premise relies on maintaining tension, so that the viewer never knows which way the story will fall. In turn, that relies on clever direction, scripting and editing (as one unsubtle clue too ITV’s new thriller
f there’s one thing us Brits know how to do well – apart from make a mean cup of tea and queue politely – it’s how to make a compelling TV crime drama. In recent years, the likes of Killing Eve, Line of Duty, Informer, Body guard and The Responder have all been jewels in prime-time schedules and reliable exports. But this has conse quences for developing a new series as producers needs to offer something a littleEnterdifferent. The Suspect, based on Michael Robotham’s 2004 bestseller. Set in central London, it follows clinical psy chologist Joe O’Loughlin (played by Poldark’s Aidan Turner) as he joins forces with detectives Vincent Ruiz (Shaun Parkes) and Riya Devi (Anjli Mohindra) to solve the case of a bru tally murdered woman. But it turns out that things may not be all they seem when we discover that our hero knows more about the case than he initially lets on. The big question of this whodunnit then becomes: did he dunnit?
Did he dunnit?
After a screening of the first episode in London, Jake Lushington, head of drama at World Productions (responsi ble for Line of Duty, Vigil and Save Me) explained to the RTS that it’s a small but fundamental twist on the ever-popular genre: “It is interesting, how do you make crime different? You think, ‘Well, let’s set it on Mars’. But actually… not letting the audience know who your good guy is and who’s the bad guy, is just as radical.”
The Suspect, starring Aidan Turner, twists some of the genre’s conventions. Shilpa Ganatra discovers how it was done
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A fan of the book already, Lushing ton lost out the first time that the rights were on the table. But it was second time lucky and, once the rights were acquired, he swiftly brought on Peter Berry (Gangs of London, The Last Enemy) as writer, and James Strong (Broad church, Vanity Fair) as lead director, with whom he had worked on Vigil ITV, too, got on board quickly and gave the creative team the freedom it needed. “That’s the great thing about working with ITV,” says Lushington. “It gave us two or three key notes but didn’t micromanage at all. Most [of its input] related to what we knew about Joe and how far we could push that. They were good notes, which affected the middle of the series quite a lot. After that, it wasn’t, like, ‘Show us your homework when you’ve done it’.”
“I had to be careful about any of that disingenuous stuff, the hoodwinking of the audience. If it’s naturally cap tured, absolutely, it feels right. But for me, I can never be, like, ‘Here’s my evil look, here’s my confused look’. Everything had to be steeped in truth.”
“Whenever there’s an emergency service, or army scene, it helps to get real people to come in. And they’re not nervous at all, because they do it every day. I remember in Liar, in the scene where Joanne Froggatt is examined after being raped, it’s a real rape nurse that features. She dealt with Jo exactly as if she was a patient.
Key to the tone of the show was the main location of central London. With cramped pubs, a hotchpotch of archi tecture, and London Bridge in the background, The Suspect is firmly rooted in today’s capital. While it added “a huge amount” to the budget, says Lushington, that wasn’t the only issue the production team faced due to the built-up location. Now that almost every spare patch of land in London has been developed, the main problem was the lack of available unit bases. Strong explains: “There are lots of things now filming in London, so the competition for these unit bases becomes tough. You have to be lean and mean and as efficient as you can be.” For example, when filming in a building opposite the Shard, “we couldn’t get all the make-up, costume and lighting trucks that close. So they had to come in early, drop everything off, and we did hair, make-up and costume on another floor in the building.Initially, you’re like, ‘Is this too much hassle?’. But when you see it on screen, you realise that it’s worth pushing that extraReflectingbit.”
n Shaun Parkes as DI Ruiz and Anjli Mohindra as DS Devi in The Suspect
27Television www.rts.org.uk September 2022 many can give the game away), as well as the skill of the lead actor, Turner. “You can only play Joe’s truth,” Turner says of the acting challenge.
“But it’s a tricky one, because the second you ask them to do something that’s outside of their comfort zone, they don’t know what to do. You’ve got to be Lushingtoncareful.” agrees: “When you’re working on the nuance of the every day, the actors know how to get the most juice, and how to make them different or special. It’s a trade-off between those two things.”
contemporary London, the diverse cast – including ethnicminority background actors and a disabled technician – adds to the series’ authenticity. Shaun Parkes says: “It wasn’t done in a worthy way where, when you’re watching it, that’s all you’ll be thinking about. It was just done in a way that represents London now. I’ve been waiting for many years to be in things that just represent the world that we see every day. When ever that turns up, it’s another reason to do a project like this.”
realism one step further in that scene, the firefighters who brief O’Loughlin as he walks out to the ledge (much needed, as Turner did a lot of the action himself, despite being scared of heights) were sourced directly from London Fire Brigade. Says Turner: “I thought he was an actor, and I said, ‘you’re really good’. And he said [putting on a nonchalant inner-London accent], ‘I’ve done this before, mate’. It felt so real, like he was ITV really walking me out. That was an interesting day.” The idea to source real-life special ists came from Strong’s work in drama documentaries. “We couldn’t afford real actors to do reconstructions, so we’d get the real police officers to do it, or the real soldiers,” he explains.
Looking ahead, it’s something of a spoiler that The Suspect is the first of a Joe O’Loughlin book series (for which World Productions owns the TV rights), but, as Lushington points out, “you still don’t know what happens to Joe and what Joe’s done”. Yet it all points to the likelihood that it won’t be the last we’ll see of Joe and the detectives – much to the delight of the hordes of TV crime fans everywhere.
Another case in point is the dramatic opening scene starring newcomer Gabin Kongolo as Malcolm, a suicidal terminally ill patient talked off a hos pital ledge by O’Loughlin, who hap pens to be in the vicinity. “We didn’t consider that Malcolm had to be played by a diverse actor. He was just bloody brilliant,” says Lushington. “He was still at drama school, so we had to get him out of school, and he knocks it out of the park. When that happens, it’s one of the more thrilling things of myTakingjob.”
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A relationshiprealdrama
T here’s nothing quite like an authentic slice-of-life drama to elicit a con nection with viewers. Over the course of a well-crafted series that is rooted in realism, the audience is bound to empathise with its uncom fortable truths. Those familiar feelings, familiar failings. We saw that in Catastrophe, which expertly depicted the ups and downs of a relationship after the gloss has gone. Or Together, which intimately docu mented a couple having to cope with the mundanity of life during lockdown while also facing a terrifying global pandemic. There are even examples without Sharon Horgan in them – in Normal People, it was the all-too-relata ble unspoken tension between young students Marianne and Connell that gripped the nation. But, so far, no UK series has drawn on what is arguably the most obvious context for realism: an everyday cou ple, 27 long and eventful years after they first said “I do”. Marriage, created, written and directed by Stefan Golaszewski, whose credits include the RTS-award winning Mum, and produced by The Forge, aims to change that in the most compelling of Theways.series follows the subtle inter play over the course of a few days as Ian, played by Sean Bean (twice an RTS acting award winner, for The Accused and Time), is made redundant from his job just as the career of his wife, Emma, played by Nicola Walker (The Split, Unforgotten), gains momentum. “The format of drama now means that something has to happen at a certain point in each episode every week,” Walker pointed out at a recent RTS event, where she was joined by Golaszewski and Bean. “When I read these scripts, I thought, ‘here’s Stefan rejecting that pattern and writing about these two people in the most honest way’. Awful things have happened to them in their 27-year marriage. That isn’t where we meet them, but you do see the effect that has realistically in a long-term loving rela tionship. It’s both difficult and joyful. A lot of the time, it’s just life lived. I have not seen that on television before.” Bean agreed. “It was like nothing I’d ever read before, and I always like something that’s different. You read a lot of scripts, and some of them are very good scripts, but they don’t have BBC Marriage
The RTS lifts the lid on Stefan Golaszewski’s new series, Marriage, a bittersweet portrait of a couple who tied the knot 27 years ago
29Television www.rts.org.uk September 2022 that amount of detail or description orGivensubtlety.”the volume of screen hours dedicated to couples, it seemed strange to Golaszewski that, until now, longterm marriages were only depicted in a heightened way that was out of sync with our “Often,experience.youfindin fiction that mar riages are things that people are des perate to get out of, or terribly sad in. People seem to be keen to cheat quite a lot,” he said. “Yet, when you look around, you see all these people just trying their best, and finding things hard and getting things wrong, but acting out of hope rather than malice. I wanted to tell that story.”
Instead, Marriage sought to put the truthful relationships between charac ters at the core of the show, and use plot as a device, rather than the other wayWalkeraround.highlighted an example in a scene where Ian seems to have made a little headway in his sensitive relation ship with daughter Jessica: “There’s a moment when Ian makes a joke, and it’s received really well by his daughter. Normally, in drama, that’s your end point – that the father who’s found it difficult to speak to his daughter cracks a joke, and everything’s better.
For Walker, playing Emma at an BBC important time in her career was another example of the realism involved. “The different personalities we are with different people is bril liantly illustrated with Emma,” she said. “The Emma that we see at work is a completely different woman to the Emma at home and the Emma with her dad. It’s [about] playing a fully rounded individual, because she has lots of different faces.” Personalities and the interplays between them have already proved to be a strength of Golaszewski’s, as demonstrated in his sitcoms Him & Her (starring Russell Tovey and Sarah Sole mani) and Mum, which also won an RTS award for lead actor Lesley Man ville. But after their successes, he pressed pause and reconsidered the art of television writing. His conclusion? Dramas today are restricted from showing real-life interactions because of their emphasis on plot and structure.
A great example of what Stefan does [is that] he has Ian say the joke again because the joke has gone well. It’s so painful. I’ve seen members of my fam ily do that at family dinners.”
It was at this point of the process that the characters were fleshed out in full. For example, with Bean’s input, they decided on Ian’s former job. “I never write biographies,” explained Golaszewski. “I’ve often been told in the past to write down what the char acters like. I don’t like doing that either, because you meet someone one day and they’ve changed the next because of what’s happened to them in the intervening period. Pinning someone down with some adjectives isn’t very truthful. You end up blocking the actors in as well, because it is they who bring the life to it.”
“When I was writing the sitcoms, people seemed to be interested that it was funny one minute and sad the next,” said Golaszewski. “But, if you’re just doing your best to tell the truth, sometimes that will emanate as funny and sometimes it will emanate as sad. Sometimes, it will emanate as some thing enormous and sometimes as Ian moving Emma’s shoes yet again. Those are the little bits of detritus that our lives are built of.” n Report by Shilpa Ganatra. ‘Marriage –Preview Q&A’ was an RTS event held on 9 August. It was hosted by journal ist Emma Bullimore and produced by Harriet Wilson, BBC drama publicist.
Nicola Walker as Emma Sean Bean as Ian BBC
And, as Emma finds work opportu nities opening up, “he feels as though he can’t speak to her because she’s always too busy now, and he doesn’t want to spoil that dream for her because he loves her. He’s happy for her but, at the same time, he’s quite jealous.”
Marriage shows how a relationship is more than the sum of its parts.
“I guess a lot of people these days are facing that, especially people in their fifties and sixties who are still compe tent and able-bodied but for some reason, maybe it’s technology, lose their jobs,” said Bean. “You leave Friday night and that’s it, it’s all gone. You have to cope with filling up 24 hours a day and feeling as though you’re getting in the way in the house and getting under the wife’s feet.”
Equally, the work ethic rarely disap pears with the work. “Ian goes into the garden a lot, he goes into his shed, starts painting things, hoovering, kill ing ants, stuff like that. Worthy things that are necessary for a man to do.”
While perhaps not intended at the time of conception, the relatability of the four-part series to its audience has increased as redundancy becomes a growing threat.
You’d never guess it from Walker and Bean’s effortless chemistry on-screen, but Marriage is the first time the pair have worked together. It helped their dynamic, said Walker, that they were given a full week of rehearsals before cameras rolled, “which is unheard of now. I remember doing it when I first started acting, when I was 22, but that has long since become a thing of the past. So, that was incredibly helpful.”
Recalling the rehearsal week, Bean added: “We clicked pretty quickly, and we got to know each other, but we were very focused on our work. It felt natural and we had a wonderful chemistry.”
Key to the success of the project was casting, with Kosminsky and Callender’s creative record making it an attractive prospect for Simon Pegg, Adrian Lester, The RTS hears why Peter Kosminsky’s cyber drama, The Undeclared War, is a warning to politicians to act before it’s too late The Undeclared War
“If another country – let’s call it Russia, but it’s certainly not the only one – attacks this country and we retaliate within the cyber domain, it will counter-attack again with a more serious cyberattack,” he explains. “It escalates one step after another step, with a sort of horrible inevitability.
“I feel that Channel 4 should go to a place that other people won’t or haven’t thought of doing. Peter has always brought us something new – a Peter Kosminsky show always feels like it’s got the DNA of Channel 4 built into it.”
A waitingcatastrophetohappen
“It does feel like we’re setting off a klaxon, telling [people]: ‘You need to be aware of what’s going on.’ And that makes it irresistible to Channel 4, where we’re always trying to be at the cutting edge, we’re always trying to be revelatory and to shine a light on who we are today.
4Channel
Because it’s terrifying,” was Peter problemwouldwhenno-holds-barredKosminsky’sanswerIaskhimwhyhetakeontheknotty–televisuallyas much as narratively – of bringing cyber conflict to the screen, before he expanded on the dire potential reallife consequences for us all.
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“We are a very interconnected world and a little bit of malware launched against some part of our critical national infrastructure, such as our electricity, our water or our communi cations, can cripple the way of life we in Britain know and have come to take for granted. So it seems to me to be a really important and valid subject for a TVThusdrama.”motivated and armed with the mountain of research notes for which he is known on previous projects (The Promise, Wolf Hall, The Government Inspec tor), Kosminsky went with co-creator Colin Callender to set out their stall for a near-future cyber thriller to Chan nel 4, where they found a very receptive ear in head of drama Caroline Hollick.
Speaking at an RTS event in midAugust about the making of the show, she said: “I was a few weeks into the job, it was very new to me, and I received Peter’s extraordinary research document, which, I think, was 54 pages. I remember my heart sank slightly and I thought, “How am I going to get through this?” And then I was com pletely compelled – gripped – just by the revelatory detail that Peter had uncovered about what was happening.
Besides his actors looking the part, another challenge of bringing coding to screen is working out how to keep the viewer involved. “It’s not my natu ral milieu,” Kosminsky conceded. “I was thinking, how do I make this interesting and entertaining for the audience?”Hisanswer was to come up with a series of visual rooms, archives and libraries to serve as a metaphor for Parvin’s mental calculations. The idea went down a treat when he nervously offered it up for Hollick’s inspection.
For a story first outlined before the Brexit referendum, Kosminsky’s narra tive is remarkably prescient – refer encing Boris Johnson’s departure 15 months previously and the possibil ity of his being replaced by a privileged person of colour. How did Kosminsky know all this? He laughs: “Well you know, you can hope! Did I think Boris would stay the course? I always thought he would burn out, I knew he was a… I don’t want to bring a libel down on your head but I don’t think there’s any debate about whether he’s been eco nomical with the truth from time to time in his career. I just didn’t think he would manage to survive, it was just a gutKosminskyinstinct.” would not be drawn on which people at GCHQ and other cen tres of power helped him construct such a realistic narrative, only reveal ing: “You would be surprised at some of the people who are prepared to talk for drama – it’s drama’s hidden secret weapon, really.”
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31Television www.rts.org.uk September 2022
“I really love challenges so I went full steam ahead and decided to learn a couple of program mergers. I taught myself JavaScript and C++ via an online course, and I did some projects with them which is the only way to really cement your knowledge of coding.”
Alex Jennings and the director’s regular stable partner, Mark Rylance.
n Report by Caroline Frost, who hosted the RTS session on The Undeclared War on 16 August. The producer was Monique Levine from DDA. Viewers in the UK can watch all episodes of The Undeclared War on All 4. The Undeclared War
Peter uses to create code world makes total sense, and it solved one of the big challenges of The Undeclared War, which is that it is quite an interior piece. It not only gave you these visual moments, but for someone like me, who had absolutely no experience of coding whatsoever, it took me by the hand through that process.”
“It was just so innovative, I just felt like I hadn’t seen it before,” she remembers. “Yet the language that
Another challenge was setting the narrative in the near future of 2024, a decision down to Kosminsky’s political curiosity. He explained: “The Russians fiddled with an American election, and I wondered, what if they tried to fiddle in an even more profound way in ours? Not so much to alter the out come but to just increase that lack of trust in our own institutions and con tempt for authority, which is their stock in trade. So that meant, you know, a quick trip to Google to find out when the election would be… it is likely to be in May 2024, so that was the first Callenderthing.”added: “It allows familiar ity with a little bit of dramatic licence. We wanted to root it and ground it in the world that we live in today, but with the licence to explore the various things that could happen.”
The actress proved her chops, how ever, when the never knowingly underprepared Kosminsky suggested she might familiarise herself with coding for the role, even delving into reverse engineering, a subject that is woven throughout the narrative. She recalled: “Peter and I talked about practising typing every day so that I could get really proficient, because these people there, it’s second nature to them.
After such a positive reception for the first six episodes, Hollick made no secret of her desire for the series to return: “The ambition for Undeclared War has always been that it would be a returning series. It’s an incredible premise, I think… it’s opened the door to telling really revelatory stories on a kind of epic global scale; watch this space is all I can say. Nothing’s return able until it returns, but definitely the ambition is there.”
There’s only Khalique-Brownone!’” agreed her experi ence of going on set alongside the veteran talents of Rylance, Pegg and co matched her character’s experience of entering GCHQ the first time: “There were many moments where I felt very much in parallel with Saara, which was a great extra kind of companionship to have with her.”
It’s a dense, complex topic to be sure, but Kosminsky was clear on the one thing he’d like viewers to take away: “I think we’re sleepwalking into some thing catastrophic. In among all the other threats we face as a society, not least the desperate effects of climate change, this is one of the most serious, so I’ve used the power of the drama medium, with my colleagues, to draw attention to this threat that we face, in the hope that some kind of avoiding action will be taken.”
Surrounded by all those familiar faces was a brand new one, Hannah KhaliqueBrown. She plays 21-year-old GCHQ intern Saara Parvin, who suddenly finds herself on the front line of high-stakes cyberwarfare, her skills belying her naivety and bemusing her seniors. She had only been acting profes sionally for a year before her audition tape landed on Kosminsky’s desk. He was immediately convinced and remembered: “I showed Hannah’s first audition to Colin, without telling him what I thought. There were about five names in the final list, and he said straight away, ‘What’s the debate?
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33 Sky’s Jahreal Wright and Timeline TV’s Jonathan ChappellSeetayah are the joint holders of the RTS Young Technologist of the Year Award 2022 – the first time the society has named two winners of this prestigious award.Dock10’s Andrew Ware was announced as the run ner-up at a special central London event in July, hosted by digital executive producer Muki Kulhan. Ware receives the Coffey Award for Excel lence in Wright,Technology.agraduate of the Mama Youth Project, is a user support specialist at Sky and has worked on Formula 1 and Premier League football. Chappell-Seetayah started his career at the BBC on its Television www.rts.org.uk September 2022 RTS NEWS
RTS Awards broadcast engineering degree apprenticeship.TerryMarsh,Chair of the awards jury, said: “Jahreal and Jonathan demonstrated… the drive to move the industry and technology forwards and to be an integral part of the UK production community for years to come.” They receive an all-expenses-paid trip to IBC 2022 and an invitation to the RTS London Convention. The award was established by the RTS with funds from the family of the engineer AMAheadBeresford-Cooke.ofthepresentation, a panel, chaired by Kulhan, looked at the future of the TV industry, including remote production, image robotics and live broadcasts.
The panellists were: Claire Wilkie, MD of LimitlessHampartsoumianPaul
New speakers have been added to an already impressive roster of names at the Society’s London Convention, “The fight for attention”, at the end of this month. They include Gerhard Zeiler, Pres ident, International, Warner Bros Discovery, as an interna tional keynote speaker.
London Convention Gerhard Zeiler to speak at RTS
Jahreal Wright: one of the joint winners this year
Broadcast; Mo-Sys Engineer ing product manager Florian Gallier; and the 2020 RTS Young Technologist of the Year, Krystel Richards. Delivering a keynote speech on entrepreneurship, Wilkie revealed that she started the outside broadcast company Limitless a decade ago at the age of just 23. She said: “I want to make people feel they can achieve whatever they put their mind to… that they can livestream off the top of mountains, do drone shows over 5G, that they can change the game in sports broad casting with remote produc tion and the cloud. “We pioneer at the frontier of technology. We’re not afraid to step out there, do the R&D and then bring it to market.”
Next-generation techs
conventionWarnerBrosDiscovery
“Our programme for the London Convention 2022 is taking great shape and is set to be an unmissable touch point in the calendar,” said Theresa Wise, CEO of the Royal Television Society. “We are delighted the esteemed Gerhard Zeiler will be joining us and look forward to hearing his and all of the speakers’ insights on the international TV landscape and the ‘fight for attention’.”
Speakers added include four from multinational news channel CNN: senior producer Barbara Arvanitidis; chief international investiga tive correspondent Nima Elbagir, and investigative producers Gianluca Mezzo fiore and Katie Polglase.
Wark. YouTube EMEA regional boss Ben McOwen Wilson is stepping down after more than a decade leading the Google-owned platform across the region. He is departing YouTube but stay ing with Google, as he gets set
Other names revealed are: Ofcom Chair Michael Grade; Maria Kyriacou, President, ViacomCBS Networks UK, Australia and Israel; Google’s Ben McOwen Wilson; and two high-profile BBC jour nalists, Amol Rajan and Kirsty
Gerhard Zeiler to lead the Google Play app store in EMEA. The convention takes place on 27 September at Kings Place, London. Previously announced speakers include: BBC Director-General Tim Davie; Priya Dogra, President and MD, EMEA, Warner Bros Discovery; Channel 4 CEO Alex Mahon; ITV CEO Caro lyn McCall; and Stephen van Rooyen, Executive VicePresident and CEO, UK and Europe, Sky. The principal sponsor is Warner Bros Discovery.
Matthew Bell
For information and book ing: rts-london-convention-2022rts.org.uk/event/ Matthew Bell
34 Ahead of Ackley Bridge’s return to TV this sum mer, RTS Yorkshire brought together some of the show’s young talent – old and new – to discuss Channel 4’s popular school drama.Laila Zaidi plays Asma Farooqi, a new teacher who, she explains, has been “suf focated by the pressures and the stress of living in Lon don”, and has swapped law for teaching. “I’ve been there – it can be a daunting, over whelming and a very expen sive place to live,” added the Newcastle-raised actor.
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Ackley Bridge, which made its TV debut in 2017, is made by leading indie The Forge in and around Halifax. “I’m from RTS West of England offered a free editorial training workshop, given by Bafta’s Albert scheme, at the new BBC Studios building in Bristol in early July. It highlighted ways to create content that supports RTS Yorkshire Yorkshire and I think it’s really important to represent the North and to tell those storylines that don’t always get the spotlight,” said Taylor. “It’s important that they’re told by the communities from which they’re grown. And it’s beautiful and looks great on telly – the moor scenes, of which we’ve got quite a few in this series, look fantastic.”
Ackley Bridge, she notes approvingly, “shows two communities – you’ve got the traditional Muslim Pakistani community and the white working class, and it shows how they come together through the conduit of school.
WestRTS Englandof an environmentally sustain ableAlbertsociety.sustainability trainer and consultant Frankie Singler started proceedings with an overview of Albert and set the context of challenges raised by climate change. He then delved into “Planet placement”, an Albert cam paign that provides practical guidance on how to incorpo rate climate change issues and sustainability programme-making.intoSinglersharedcase stud ies and encouraged discus sion, with a view to
Top Boy actor Ashley Wal ters is another new face – but behind the camera, sharing directing duties on series 5 with Reza Moradi.
Laila Zaidi in Ackley Bridge
Bristol hosts Albert green training achieving more and better climate storytelling across allThegenres.session ended with pledges on how participants would incorporate sustain able principles into their home and work life. Suzy Lambert
Yasmin Al-Khudhairi, who plays firebrand Fizza, said: “The naturalism that [Ashley] has in acting he definitely brings to directing as well…. He has a very funny, chilledout presence…. [He] puts everyone at ease.”
School’s in for summer
Walters directed the short film Boys a couple of years ago, but Ackley Bridge is his first major TV directing gig.
Writer Kamal Kaan chaired the RTS Yorkshire event, which was held on 7 July. It was introduced by Caroline Hollick, head of drama at Channel 4. Matthew Bell
4Channel
Megan Morgan, who took over the role of school beauty Marina for the new series, added: “He gave us more time for emotional scenes, which is needed when film ing is so Turningfast-paced.”towhatshe hoped viewers would take from a series known for tackling difficult subjects, Zaidi said: “It’s OK not to be OK… and [say] I need help, whether that’s addiction, mental health or whatever.”
“It tells real working-class stories and struggles, with authenticity, honesty and always with warmth, love andProducerhumour.”Jade Taylor said: “It’s been an absolute joy to work on Ackley Bridge…. We have the opportunity to… tell stories that we feel really passionate about and are pertinent to the world today, and that resonate with the working-class communities of the North and with schools.”
Sunday Morning Live E
arlier this year, a joint bid from two North ern Ireland indies – Tern TV Belfast and Green Inc – won the tender to produce 24 episodes a year of Sunday Morning Live, BBC One’s ethical and reli gious current affairs show.
“There really is nothing like the buzz of live TV,” said Littler. “It’s not for everyone… you have to have a certain amount of bravery and knowhow to be reactive and prob lem solve very quickly.” Hughes added: “Stephen and I, independently of each other, years back, made deci sions that we would never work with people we didn’t like. We hire people we like and can have a lot of fun with – that’s important in telly. If you can’t enjoy your self, what are you doing?”
Tern has made many reli gious programmes, including Songs of Praise, while Green Inc has a track record in live studio shows. “It felt like the right thing to do together,” said Hughes. “I wanted to get back into live television again… there’s nothing more exciting.”
35Television www.rts.org.uk September 2022 BOOK REVIEW
The show is broadcast live from a London studio, using producers and directors in Glasgow, Manchester and Sheffield, but is produced and edited in Holywood, Northern Ireland. It sounds complicated but it works, as a recent joint RTS London/ Yorkshire event discovered.
The show is planned in Holywood during the week, before key crew such as Dimmock and producer Kathy Littler fly to London on Saturday to write the script, BBC brief presenters and film the show. “It’s topical and live, and things change,” said Hughes. “This means that, until it’s over, you’re juggling things.”
n ‘Sunday Morning Live: Pro duction focus’ was a joint RTS London and RTS Yorkshire event, held online on 21 July. It was chaired by Fiona Thompson and produced by Phil Barnes.
Finding my religion
Sunday Morning Live’s exec utive producers – head of Tern TV Belfast Brendan Hughes and Green Inc founder Stephen Stewart – are old colleagues from the BBC. “We’ve always wanted to find something to work together on… this one came along and it looked like it was a great mix of our comple mentary skills,” said Stewart.
BBC One ethics show Sunday Morning Live is a truly UK-wide affair, discovers Matthew BellRTS London/ Yorkshire ‘THERE IS NOTHING LIKE THE BUZZ OF LIVE TV’
The indies won a two-year contract to make the show, following a keenly fought tender process. “We bring a different perspective to the show,” said Hughes. “We’re right on the very edge of the UK and it feels like we look in rather than look out…. We’re looking at the entire nation.” Nevertheless, the two indies decided to shoot at ITN in London. “A lot of the guests are based in London and [with] a Sunday-morning show, if we make [it] some where else, be it Glasgow or Belfast, you’d be asking guests to fly there on a Saturday, including the presenters, and they’re key… [You’d be] tying people up for their weekend,” explained Stewart. Guests who can’t get to London join the show via Zoom, which Stewart said is now accepted TV practice. Sunday Morning Live addresses topical issues but, said Hughes, “We’ll not take a political view on a subject – we take an ethical shows…politicaltwothe“Wecontinued:NeilSeriesview.”editorDimmockcomeoffbackofheavilyviewers won’t want us to be having the same conversations they’ve heard all morning, but these are clearly important subjects.” Sunday Morning Live has its own distinctive take on sto ries. In the wake of Boris Johnson’s resignation, the show hosted a discussion about leadership, asking whether moral integrity was a key ingredient. Dimmock said: “We’re not avoiding the big talking points but we’re finding [their] ethical, moral or religious angles.” Are any subjects taboo? “We wouldn’t rule anything out,” said Dimmock. “It’s the way that approachyou it rather than the tryadded:isitselfsubjectthatkey.”Hughes“Wetoavoid overly political voices…. We’re looking for a voice that hasn’t been heard in the debate…. We like to come at it from a different angle.”
embracedBBCTV
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Malcolm Baird praises a history of the broadcaster’s formative yearsBook Review T his important book has been more than 10 years in the mak ing and, by a fortu nate chance, it has been published in the BBC’s cen tenary36 year, just a few years ahead of the centenary of television itself.
How the
Public broadcasting in Britain was only legally possible through the BBC, which had been founded in 1922 and received its Charter in The1927.BBC was at first very cautious towards television, and its Director-General, John Reith, confessed in later life that he had been “afraid of [television] from the start”. But, eventually, the BBC was converted and in 1929 it agreed to broadcast experi mental television (using 30 lines) on one of its radio wavelengths, outside regular broadcasting hours. This gradual winning over of the BBC is the main theme of this book, which covers the period between 1926 and the outbreak of the Second World War in 1939. It is lucidly written and surpris ingly short at 208 pages. However, the book includes 585 endnotes and 10 pages of bibliography.Muchofits material comes from the archives of the BBC and various Gaumonttheiscoveragecommittees.parliamentaryHowever,theofBairdTelevisionlessdetailed.Forexample,company’stakeoverbyBritishPicturesin
1932 is only mentioned in passing, although the influx of capital led to a major expansion.Priortothe Gaumont take over, Baird Television employed about 30 staff. But when, in 1933, it opened new laboratories at the Crystal Palace, it added 300 techni calInstaff.1934, a fully equipped high-definition television studio was set up, but sadly this was lost in the Crystal Palace fire of November 1936. Despite the above criti cism, I recommend Professor Medhurst’s book to the seri ous researcher on the history of Asbroadcasting.hepointsout, his book is more focused on media politics than the technology of television itself. In fact, new technology is still driving changes that are not always foreseen by the administrators. The book’s hidden message is that the gap between technical and administrative thinking in the television industry has been wider than it should be. One quick postscript. Pro fessor Medhurst goes into much detail about Lance Sieveking’s production of The Man with the Flower in his Mouth. This puts me in mind of Sieveking’s 1935 novel, The Perfect Witch – Love Story of Fabian Cloudesley, Announcer It gives us a picture of what it was like to work for the BBC in the 1930s and it also contains a vivid descrip tion of the Baird 30-line “flying spot” camera in the basement studio at Broad castingPerhapsHouse.itis not too late for the BBC to support the reissue of this novel, which is a good read as well as having historical value. n Malcolm Baird is a retired university professor and the son of John Logie Baird, the inventor of the first working television.
The Early Years of Television and the BBC by Jamie Medhurst is published by Edinburgh University Press, priced £85.00. ISBN: 9780748637867
As Professor Medhurst points out, the history of television is an enormous subject. Its early days can be summarised by man of let ters Samuel Johnson’s quota tion about a dog walking on its hind legs: “It is not done well, but you are surprised to find it done at all.” Public interest was immense. It was fed by optimistic articles by Oliver Hutchinson, the general manager of John Logie Baird’s small and undercapi talised company, which was, at first, called Television Ltd. Publicity also came through Sydney Moseley, an able but argumentative jour nalist who was critical of the BBC’sBairdhesitancy.himselfspent most of his time in the laboratory, as is evident from his steady output of patents for improvements and new forms of television.
Google taps YouTube topper for Play Congratulations to YouTube executive Ben McOwen Wil son, who is being promoted within the Google empire. He is standing down, after more than 11 years, as regional director for YouTube EMEA and MD of YouTube UK and Ireland to lead the fast-grow ing Google Play app store in EMEA. Ben’s presence has brought a calm authority to many an RTS event, not least as Chair of last year’s Cam bridge“YouTubeConvention.EMEA is so burnt into my soul, and I suspect I have left my mark with YouTube also,” he said of his departure. Too true.
From dragons to another of TV’s most dangerous beasts – the impeccably grumpy Jeremy Paxman, who is stand ing down as University Chal lenge’s master of ceremonies. Thankfully, the erstwhile Newsnight attack dog will record one more series of the box’s brainiest quiz show, which began on ITV 60 years ago with Bamber Gacoigne asking the questions and is now a ratings banker for BBCForTwo.more than 1,000 epi sodes, Paxman’s look of withering disdain for under graduates struggling to answer the easier questions has been compared to that of a disgusted thoroughbred horse. The Upside couldn’t possibly comment – and looks forward to seeing him in other TV roles soon, including an ITV documen tary detailing his experience of Parkinson’s disease.
The Disabled Writers in Development Programme intends to prepare disabled writers to be commissioned by ITV and the wider industry.
Funded by ITV’s £500,000 Diversity Development Fund, the scheme will run for a year, and four writers will be given the means to develop an ITV-focused idea and write a pilot script. It is supported by Patrick Spence’s scripted studio and Tall Story ApplicationsPictures.are open to disabled people only. Those applying must have at least one paid writing credit in TV, theatre, short film or radio. n Hewlett
The
The Steve
‘The BBC – Destroy at your peril’
In a month of heatwaves, drought, torrential storms and soaring inflation, Sky brought some much-needed relief for a few hours in midAugust. Hollywood-style movie glitz lit up London’s Leicester Square for the pre miere of the Game of Thrones prequel, House of the Dragon Not one, but two, full-size cinemas – the Odeon Luxe and Cineworld – screened the first episode of the HBO and Sky Atlantic fantasy epic. Matt Smith and Emma D’Arcy were among the stars gracing the red carpet emerg ing from a castle erected in the middle of Leicester Square. London’s West End had seen nothing like it since before the pandemic struck.
Given by journalist and broadcaster Clive Myrie September 6.00pm for a 6.30pm start University of Westminster, 4-12 Little Titchfield Street, London W1W 7BY Booking: www.rts.org.uk. £20.00 / Student discounted tickets £10
A welcoming door for disabled writers Finally, everyone knows that we need to hear more dis abled voices in TV drama. Shows such as Jack Thorne’s recent rollicking Then Barbara Met Alan are all too rare. A new ITV Studios scheme aims to address the problem.
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Paxo signs up for more witty disdain
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There will be a reception after the lecture in the Portland Hall. Proceeds of the lecture will go to the Steve Hewlett Scholarship Fund, which is chaired by Sir Clive Jones, and managed by him, Steve’s widow, Rachel Crellin, and John Mair.
38 PatronsMajorRTS RTS PATRONS BBC Channel 4 ITV SkyPatronsPrincipalRTS A+E Networks International Apple NetflixNBCUniversalLibertyKineticTV+ContentGlobalInternational TheSpencerParamountStuartWaltDisney Company Warner Bros Discovery YouTube PatronsInternationalRTS ChannelBTBostonBanijayAudioAmazonAll3MediaAccentureVideoNetworkUKConsultingGroup5 KornITNIMGGBFremantleFinecastEntertainmentEndersDeloitteAnalysisOneNewsStudiosFerry TheSTVSargent-DiscS4CRokuOC&CNTTnetgem.tvDataGroupJournalists’Charity The Trade Desk VirginUKTV Media O2 YouView Grass LuminaValleySearch Mission Bay MPC Episodic PricewaterhouseCoopers Raidió Teilifís ÉireannPatronsRTS Patron HRH The Prince of Wales Vice-Presidents David Abraham Dawn Airey Sir David Attenborough OM CH CVO CBE FRS Baroness SirStewartTrevorGavinSirKenDavidBaronessIanArmandoLorraineLordGregGaryMikeBenjaminFloellaOBEDarceyDaveyDykeHallofBirkenheadHeggesseyIannucciOBEJonesLawrenceofClarendonOBELynnMacQuarrieTrevorMcDonaldOBEPattersonPhillipsOBEPurvisCBEHowardStringer Chair of RTS Trustees Jane Turton Honorary Secretary David Lowen Honorary Treasurer Mike Green BOARD OF TRUSTEES Lynn RobJaneSarahSinéadSimonJaneDavidYasminaMikeJulianBarlowBellamyGreenHaddedLowenMillichipPittsRocksRoseTurtonWoodward ChiefEXECUTIVEExecutive Theresa Wise Bursaries Consultant Anne Dawson CENTRES COUNCIL Lynn Barlow Phil EdwardSiobhanCameronJonStephenWillTimKullyLisaStephanieAgnesTonyFionaBarnesCampbellCampbellCoganFarmerHoldsworthKhailaMarshallNicholsonO’DonnellQuayleRoachRobbie-JamesRussell SPECIALIST GROUP ArchivesCHAIRS Dale Grayson Diversity Angela Ferreira Early Evening Events Heather Jones Education Graeme Thompson RTS Futures Alex Wootten RTS Technology Bursaries Simon Pitts AWARDS COMMITTEE AwardsCHAIRS& Fellowship Policy David Lowen Craft & Design Awards Ade Rawcliffe Programme Awards Kenton Allen Student Television Awards Sinéad Rocks Television Journalism Awards Simon Bucks Who’s who at the RTS